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The Semiotics of Che Guevara
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Advances in Semiotics Semiotics has complemented linguistics by expanding its scope beyond the phoneme and the sentence to include texts and discourse, and their rhetorical, performative, and ideological functions. It has brought into focus the multimodality of human communication. Advances in Semiotics publishes original works in the field demonstrating robust scholarship, intellectual creativity, and clarity of exposition. These works apply semiotic approaches to linguistics and non-verbal productions, social institutions and discourses, embodied cognition and communication, and the new virtual realities that have been ushered in by the Internet. It also is inclusive of publications in relevant domains such as socio-semiotics, evolutionary semiotics, game theory, cultural and literary studies, human–computer interactions, and the challenging new dimensions of human networking afforded by social websites. Series Editor: Paul Bouissac is Professor Emeritus at the University of Toronto (Victoria College), Canada. He is a world-renowned figure in semiotics and a pioneer of circus studies. He runs the SemiotiX Bulletin [www.semioticon.com/semiotix] which has a global readership. Titles in the Series: A Buddhist Theory of Semiotics, Fabio Rambelli A Semiotics of Smiling, Marc Mehu Introduction to Peircean Visual Semiotics, Tony Jappy Semiotics of Drink and Drinking, Paul Manning Semiotics of Happiness, Ashley Frawley Semiotics of Religion, Robert Yelle The Language of War Monuments, David Machin and Gill Abousnnouga
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The Semiotics of Che Guevara Affective Gateways Maria-Carolina Cambre
Bloomsbury Academic An Imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
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Bloomsbury Academic An imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc 50 Bedford Square London WC1B 3DP UK
1385 Broadway New York NY 10018 USA
www.bloomsbury.com Bloomsbury and the Diana logo are trademarks of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc First published 2015 © Maria-Carolina Cambre 2015 Maria-Carolina Cambre has asserted her right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identified as the Author of this work. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage or retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publishers. No responsibility for loss caused to any individual or organization acting on or refraining from action as a result of the material in this publication can be accepted by Bloomsbury or the author. The following chapters have been reprinted with minor changes and permission: Chapter 2 This chapter is reprinted with permission from Imaginations: Journal of Cross-Cultural Image Studies/Revue d’études interculturelles de l’image. An earlier version is available at: https://www.csj.ualberta.ca/imaginations/?p=2916 Chapter 3 This chapter is reprinted with permission from Wilfrid Laurier Press. An earlier version appears in R. Shields, O. Park, & T. Davidson (eds.), Ecologies of affect. 217–43. Chapter 4 This chapter is reprinted with permission from The Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies. An earlier version can be found in the Special Issue on Youth Culture and Globalization 31(4), 338–64 Giroux & Szeman (eds). British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN: ePDF: 978-1-4725-1222-2
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A catalog record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. Typeset by Fakenham Prepress Solutions, Fakenham, Norfolk NR21 8NN
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In memory of my father. Your love, grace and humour were boundless. Your deep spirituality and thirst for justice unquenchable. Until we see each other again. This book is for all those who never give up.
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Contents List of illustrations 1. Introduction 2. Stealing the Image? Copyright and the Failed Branding of Che Guevara’s Image 3. Virtual Resurrections: Che Guevara’s Image as Place of Hope 4. Revolution Within: Youth and the Face of Che Guevara in Venezuela 5. Beyond Semiotics: The Agency of Che Guevara’s Image in East Timor 6. Alchemy: Indigenous and Artistic Methods for Understanding the Work of Che’s Image 7. About Face 8. The Unfinished Business of the Guerrillero Heroico: Queering Che Notes Bibliography Index
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viii 1 7 37 65 89 121 145 169 197 207 221
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List of illustrations Figure 2.1: “Is the revolution just a t-shirt away?” Graffiti of Che Guevara in Bergen, Norway. January 2009 by Sveter (source: 7 Wikimedia commons) Figure 2.2: “Guerrillero colombiano de las FARC, montañas del 22 Caquetá, Colombia” (2001) by Venezuelan photographer Pedro Ruíz Figure 2.3: Zapatista Mural (photo credit C. Cambre) 23 23 Figures 2.4 and 2.5: Che Kitch (by C. Cambre) Figure 2.6: Palestine Che (Courtesy of Carlos Latuff) 31 32 Figure 2.7: Che Christ (courtesty of Allan McDonald) Figure 3.1: Photo: R. Shivaji Rao in “26th AISF national conference begins.” The Hindu: Online edition of India’s National Newspaper (Wednesday, January 4, 2006) 38 Figure 3.2: “West Bank barrier Che Guevara” (available at: Wikimedia Commons. Original source: www.heyche.com by permission of the 41 webmaster: no longer online) 44 Figure 3.3: (Tehuacan, Mexico and Marcos/source Indymedia) Figure 3.4: Mural Belfast, Ireland 2009 (Photo credit Anna McClean) 45 Figure 3.5: Spain protest: Indymedia/copyleft 48 49 Figure 3.6: Athens, Greece Figure 3.7: School mural in Gonzales Catán, Buenos Aires, Argentina. 52 (Photo credit: C. Cambre) 54 Figure 3.8: New York City Mural: Indymedia/copyleft Figure 3.9: Barcelona: Indymedia/copyleft 56 Figure 3.10: Brussels 2004: Indymedia copyleft (http://archive. indymedia.be/uploads/-chenge-.jpg)57 61 Figure 3.11: Protest rally London, England May 17, 2003: Indymedia Figure 3.12: Honduras: Indymedia 62 Figure 4.1: Guerrillero Heroico66 71 Figure 4.2: Mural in 23 de enero, Caracas Figure 4.3: The mural commemorating pool recovery which reads 74 “espacios col. Alexis Vive” acts on this space, claiming it 75 Figure 4.4: Guevara mask mural
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List of illustrations
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Figure 4.5: Parking lot mural 76 77 Figure 4.6: Mural in honor of Kley Figure 4.7: Mural of bandana 80 Figure 4.8: Alexis Vive uniform 82 Figure 4.9: Mural in 23 de enero by Colombian graffiteros 84 (photo C. Cambre) Figure 5.1: Bolivian miner’s hat (credit Indymedia) 90 Figure 5.2: Swiss cigarette package 91 92 Figure 5.3: Munoz’s food art (Cambre screenshot) 93 Figure 5.4: Tyson tat (screenshot from revleft.com) Figure 5.5: Zapatista mural 94 95 Figure 5.6: Fan Bingbing (screenshot: Cambre) Figure 5.7: Dili (Flickr, franjer79) 113 113 Figure 5.8: Che Guevara in St Crus, Dili 2008 (Flickr, franjer79) Figures 5.9: Xanana Gusmao 115 115 Figures 5.10: Xanana and Falintil forces in East Timor Figure 5.11: Xanana with East Timorese Fretilin forces (photographer unknown) (Available at: http://jakartagreater.com/tour-of-duty-timortimur/)116 Figure 5.12: Manifestazione pro-Xanana (photographer unknown. Available at: http://www.balene.it/enzo/timor/mailtimor.html 118 118 Figure 5.13: Che Guevara, Malibere, Artorde de Araujo’s house Figure 6.1: Chenigma (6' by 4' multimedia collage: C. Cambre) 123 127 Figure 6.2: Chenigma Fragment (C. Cambre) Figure 7.1: Image by Carlos Latuff (Wikimedia Commons) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:CheTunisiaLatuff.gif145 150 Figure 7.2: Nakba commemorations 2008 (Amber Hussain) Figure 7.3: The Green Che (wikimedia commons 21 June 2009) by 151 Hamed Saber 152 Figure 7.4: Place 13 mai (flickr.com Creative Commons) Figure 7.5: Tunisia 2905 (Dennis Jarvis: flickr.com Creative Commons) 152 153 Figure 7.6: Bethlehem (Creap: flickr.com Creative Commons) Figure 7.7: Screenshots of avatars (Carolina Cambre) 155 Figure 7.8: Tehran Protests (screenshot of video still by C. Cambre, 2011) 157 Figure 7.9: Screenshot of Palestinian girl 158 158 Figure 7.10: Guevara in Gaza screenshot by M.C. Cambre Figure 7.11: Photo by Yossi Gurvitz, September 1, 2011 159 160 Figure 7.12: Egyptian visit with Nasser (Wikimedia Commons)
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List of illustrations
Figure 7.13: Che with Egyptian farmers (Wikimedia Commons) 161 162 Figure 7.14: King Tut Che Figure 7.15: King Tut and Che t-shirt 163 Figure 7.16: Egyptian protester with flag (twitter feed) 164 165 Figure 7.17: Otto Schade Graffiti London (photo by Matt Brown 2010) Figure 8.1: creative commons photo by “somebody” (2008) http://www.flickr.com/photos/sabriirmak/2195788479/170 Figure 8.2: Image by Javier Cartagena (Tíno) Copyleft [http://pr.indymedia.org/news/2005/09/9966_comment.php#10117]170 Figure 8.3. Victor Hugo Robles, the Gay Che (Image courtesy of 171 V. H. Robles) 174 Figure 8.4: Viva Allende (photo courtesy V. H. Robles) Figure 8.5: El Che de los Gays levanta cuadro (courtesy Robles) 181 186 Figure 8.6: Pages from Paris Match (photo C. Cambre) Figure 8.7: Screenshot from Montag blog (https://pedromarquesdg. 187 wordpress.com/tag/roman-cieslewicz/) 2014 Figure 8.8: Close up of Paris Match page (photo C. Cambre) 188 189 Figure 8.9: The Corpse of Che Guevara 1967 by Freddy Alborta Figure 8.10A: Page from Paris Match, May 18, 1968 (Edition Carolina Cambre)190 Figure 8.10B: Page from Paris Match, May 18, 1968 (Carolina Cambre) 191 193 Figure 8.11: Gay Liberation Front U.K. 1971 Cover (author unknown)
Note on photographs Every reasonable effort has been made to trace and acknowledge the ownership of the copyrighted material. Any errors that may have occurred are inadvertent, and will be corrected in subsequent editions, provided notification is sent to the author. Because I have been collecting photographs where Guevara’s face appears since 2004, many of the Internet sites that once featured them are no longer available. Regardless, I only downloaded images that were designated “in the public domain” and the primary source for these has been the Indymedia network. Copyleft: Unless otherwise stated, all Indymedia contributions are considered available for re-use without seeking permission from the author, as long as those that re-use them allow further free re-use of the derivative work. This is known as Copyleft. Although it varies from one Indymedia base to another, some can specify the terms of publication from a range of off-the-shelf licenses, Creative
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Commons and GNU Free Documentation Licenses. Indymedia is a messy but beautiful thing. All translations are mine unless otherwise indicated. All photographs were taken by Maria-Carolina Cambre unless otherwise credited. The original was famously copyright free.
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Introduction
In a society that is visually super-saturated, we have become accustomed to using and producing images. The significance of taking pictures seriously and grasping the visual conceptually is well established. While we navigate the image-scape successfully, we may not necessarily understand how images work on or with us, nor what becomes of reality when it is understood to function in relation to the image’s perspective. Remarkably, insights into the pedagogical functions of the power and effect of visual images have not kept pace with this paradigm shift as the continued identification of knowledge with language reveals. Images represent an other mode of thinking. They bring new possibilities for imagining social and political change. As a result, I have come to understand images as not just visual documentation but also as cultural labour. Correspondingly, this book invites readers to participate in a visual interaction with images of Ernesto “Che” Guevara through their multiple and varied renderings. This book is about the way an image—the most reproduced image in the history of photography—has been and is worked and reworked. The central image, from which the multitude of “spin-offs” have been produced, is known as Guerrillero Heroico,1 and was taken by in March 1960 by Alberto Díaz Gutiérrez (familiarly known as Korda). Images have a multivalent nature and a tendency to allow multiple and sometimes contradictory interpretations. By their very nature, images challenge authoritative interpretations since elements one person overlooks may be noted by another. Additionally, there is perhaps some fear of giving visuals a prominent space in academic work. This book does not pretend to be the final word on the significations of Guevara’s image in action and has both its advantages and its limitations. It aims to create a space for understanding the
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phenomenon and for providing a starting point for a better perspective of the semiotic significance of visual events in the public arena, as well as for their their cultural and socio/political resonance. I agree with Marcus and Fischer’s (1986) observations that “In periods when fields are without secure foundations, practices become the engine of innovation” (quoted in Lather 1994, 37). Expanding on this belief, Lather notes that responsibility has shifted from “representing things in themselves to representing the web of ‘Structure, Sign, and Play’ of social relations [Derrida 1978]. It is not a matter of looking harder or more closely, but of seeing what frames our seeing—spaces of constructed visibility and incitements to see which constitute power/knowledge” (Lather 1994, 38).
A note on the life and death of Che Guevara Ernesto “Che” Guevara was born in Argentina, June 14, 1928 (although the exact date is sometimes disputed) and was assassinated October 9, 1967 in Bolivia having been a major figure in Fidel Castro’s Cuban Revolution (1953–9). A revolutionary, physician, writer, guerilla leader, diplomat, and military theorist and marxist thinker, he has become a symbol of anti-imperialism and rebellion throughout the world—as can be seen through the lens of the continuing salience of the photographic image of him that is the subject of this book. He is one of the relatively few people who can instantly be recognized by just his nickname: “Che” which roughly translates as friend—as in, for example, mate, or pal, but is more often an Argentinism for saying “hey.” As a young medical student, he was moved with a desire to alleviate the poverty, hunger, and disease he witnessed throughout South America, which he attributed to capitalist exploitation by the United States. He became involved in Guatemala’s social reforms, and was radicalized after witnessing how President Jacobo Arbenz was overthrown in a U.S.-backed military coup. He then joined Cuban revolutionary Fidel Castro and the group that would become known as the July 26 Movement. They would finally overthrow of U.S.-backed Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista who was prone to have his forces leave corpses of those they had questioned and tortured to death on street corners as lessons to the populace. As the guerrillas took over territory, they would re-distribute the land amongst the peasants, which served to increase their support. Eventually, entire military units would defect and join the guerrillas and, after a failed election, Batista fled the country.
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Introduction
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Guevara was prominent in the new government in, for example, reviewing the sentences given by the revolutionary tribunals, reforms in agrarian land, industry, and in promoting literacy. He acted as a Cuban diplomat abroad, and was Minister for Industries from 1961–5. Castro’s revolution in 1959 had a strong nationalist orientation that conflicted with U.S. interests. Washington’s reaction was to rupture relations in 1961 and impose an economic blockade. After the failed Bay of Pigs invasion by a C.I.A.sponsored paramilitary group, the Cuban government tacked toward the U.S.S.R. and an alignment that would establish a communist regime. Critical of the Soviets, and concerned about Cuba’s relative isolation, Guevara left Cuba in 1965, intent on aiding revolution elsewhere. He was eventually wounded and captured by C.I.A.-paramilitaries and Bolivian forces and shot. His watch and other personal effects were taken as trophies, while his hands were removed from his corpse ostensibly for later finger-print identification. His remains were interred in a secret mass grave together with his companions and were discovered (or revealed) 30 years later in 1997. Guevara is both revered and reviled, the subject of a plethora of films and literary endeavors, though it is the Korda image that is the most compelling memory in world-wide popular culture. Ironically, this image was a “grabshot”—taken on the spur of the moment when Che was unaware, in 1960, with Alberto Korda’s Leica camera. It was a moment of utter surprise for the photographer at the force of the gaze emitted by Guevara.
My research into the image of “Che” Guevara My interest in the Korda image of “Che” comes somewhat obliquely out of personal experience, at least to the extent that my conceptualization of the project was influenced by my realization that this phenomenon was important. I will briefly identify myself as someone with roots in different places, who recognizes the possibility of laying down more roots in more places in the future. Some roots are stronger than others but they hold my path in place enough so that I can to some extent trace it. Ontologically neither a tree nor a rhizome provides an adequate form to represent this way of being: instead it would look more like an ivy which develops roots from its stem as it advances in accord with its host soil and adapts to its surfaces and geological features from the radicant family. Accordingly, in turn, I have not located this image or designated its “address.” Instead, I examined how it is a
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locating—how it is a verb as well as a noun. How it enables the distribution of the visual. My intention is that this book will contribute to understandings of how images are working in the world and consequently to how people can produce and direct the visual space rather than be relegated to merely receiving or consuming them. I hasten to add that though the consumption of images is never totally passive, what I am gesturing toward is the built-in impetus of advertising images toward their subconscious consumption. The implications of seeing the vernacular image of “Che” Guevara as something that does not fit in the already designed mass media methods of study, point toward its being a somewhat different phenomenon. My claim founders unless I show that recognition of images is as valid a way to communicate as words. I have therefore explored different approaches, and provided a series of encounters with this image and looked at the levels at which it operates and how it moves fluidly between them. I will introduce these to you in no particular order following the notion of collage but also following my own processual wandering. 1. The branding discourse I considered the visual climate, accounts and stories of how people respond to the image, and the current debates surrounding the politicization of this image. I focused on the key debate surrounding the commoditization of the image and its supposed emptying of power or meaning that has been the point of division around which those who admire Guevara the historical figure confront those who decry him as an assassin. I find the virulence of the debate to be a commanding indicator of the saliency of this image today. (This topic is discussed in Chapter 2.) 2. Phenomenology I explored the personal experiences of people who have encountered or been impacted by the image in some way through a phenomenological approach where participants share anecdotes about their experiences with this image. In Chapter 3, I discuss how phenomenologists such as Gabriel Marcel, Emmanuel Levinas and Roland Barthes provide theoretical lenses for reflection and analysis. Because participants frequently connect hope to their experiences of the image, I expanded on this concept as an animating motif, and as a contribution to understandings of the acting/being of the Guerrillero Heroico.
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3. Ethnographic case study—Caracas A group of youths in urban Caracas, Venezuela in a slum called 23 de enero, decorated their entire neighborhood with images of Che. Through their words and the images in their neighborhood, I outline in Chapter 4 how, in 2007, I eventually made contact to carry out fieldwork studies. They taught me how they come to an understanding of praxis and action with reference to Che Guevara’s face in their neighborhood. I draw on Hannah Arendt’s (1959) theory of action as a parallel to what these youths called “actioning.” Their concept of “actioning” brings to the fore the performative aspects of the image in a way that scholarly work in the area of the visual has yet to reach. “Actioning” through their use of imagery becomes the codes by which these youths resist, rage, cry, and hope in the possibility of throwing off the imperial yoke and all its colonial weight. I still wear their bandana as recognition of my continuing obligation to them. 4. Semiotics I explored C. S. Peirce’s doctrine of signs and followed up on Donald Preziosi’s (2003) with an elaboration of Roman Jakobson’s addition of a fourth sign type, namely artifice. The inclusion of artifice is underwritten by an understanding of A. J. Greimas’ (1987) semiotic square as a way to introduce complexity into binary or dual forms. I position the square as a dynamic, fractal-like construction—fluid in the sense that it is continually multiplying and contingent. (A discussion of this is in Chapter 5.) 5. Collage/IRMs (Indigenous Research Methodologies) I also discuss the fifth aspect of my research in Chapter 5, which is more visual, and underpinned by IRMs and principles: it manifests itself in an arts-led approach. The first layer of this visual section is a reflection on my own journey in coming to know Che Guevara through his image and becoming someone who can express that knowledge by learning through materially interacting with hundreds of examples of variations on that one picture. I use collage as a discursive strategy to offer a sequence that is nonlinear and contributes toward opening a space of representation that allows alternative forms. The image is the threshold of that space, creating it, a way out, and offering new understandings and a way to demonstrate truths rather than explicate them. This trading in forms has allowed me to follow Trinh T. Minh-Ha’s suggestion about challenging the regimes of representation—this citation from her work has been a point of reference for mine:
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To challenge the regimes of representation That govern a society is to conceive of how a Politics can transform reality. As this creative Struggle moves onward, it is bound to Recompose subjectivity and praxis. More Often than not, it requires that one leave the Realms of the known, and take oneself there Where one does not expect, is not expected to be. Trinh T. Minh-Ha, When the Moon Waxes Red (1991)
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Stealing the Image? Copyright and the Failed Branding of Che Guevara’s Image
Background Through an examination of the controversies surrounding the use of the Guerrillero Heroico in a Cuban context within and outside of Cuba, and finally the non-Cuban context, I examine some of the appropriations of and discourses traversing this image in order to illuminate its location, or dislocation as the case may be, as a brand, commercial product, artwork, and/or cultural artifact. Since its first publication the picture has inspired artists1 around the world to modify
Figure 2.1: “Is the revolution just a t-shirt away?” Graffiti of Che Guevara in Bergen, Norway. January 2009 by Sveter (source: Wikimedia commons)
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and render it in a myriad of media and styles.2 However when Smirnoff ’s U.K. advertising agency wanted to use the image to sell vodka in 1999, Korda, who had made no issue with previous iterations, sued them. “The ads depicted Che’s face adorned with a pattern of hammers and chilli-pepper sickles, not to foster communist consciousness in a creative redeployment of commodity fetishism, but simply to promote a new spice line of Smirnoff vodka” (Hernandez-Reguant 2008, 257). The company settled out of court and gave Korda a significant sum that he promptly donated to a hospital in Cuba. Regardless of the fame and accompanying profit potential from this photograph, Korda refused to endorse its commercialization and certainly did not gain financially. Korda claimed that using Che’s image for selling vodka was a “slur on his [Guevara’s] name” emphasizing that Che “never drank himself, was not a drunk, and [that] drink should not be associated with his immortal memory” (Frontline 2002, online). After the international lawsuit, Korda’s rights as the author were recognized publicly and spokespeople for many media conglomerates in Europe and the U.S. saw it as an unprecedented move on the part of the Cuban government toward capitalism. The debate that had been bubbling under the surface for decades finally spilled onto mainstream headlines: The Times of London wryly recast this development as if it were the Argentine revolutionary’s own long and hard fought victory … ‘After 40 Years, Che Beats Forces of Capitalism’ (Bird 2000). CNN.com likewise dramatized the event, but with a slightly less ironic, and more-to-the-point, headline: ‘Social Justice, Sí. Vodka Advertisements, No’. (Hernandez-Reguant 2008, 256)
While The Times of London and CNN position the use of copyright in this case as distinctly non-commercial, Wall Street Journal correspondent Michael Casey (2009) takes the opposite stance. Casey (2009), who wrote the only booklength English language (at the time) examination of the biography of Korda’s Guerrillero Heroico comments, “Che had not beaten capitalism; he had joined it” (313) and dismisses the photograph, “copyright number VA-1-276-975,” as no more than “a nine-character alphanumeric code” (337). In a more bizarre twist Larson and Lizardo (2007) cite Alvaro Vargas Llosa calling the image of Guevara the “quintessential brand of capitalism” (426, my emphasis). Yet literature on this particular photograph and its subsequent renderings does not reveal evidence attesting the purchase of Guevara-sporting products merely in order to champion capitalism. A historical perspective reveals that portraits of Guevara have tended to surface at key political moments. The New York Times of May 2, 1961 runs the
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Stealing the Image? Copyright and the Failed Branding of Che Guevara’s Image 9
headline “Castro Rules Out Elections in Cuba’’ (A2) on the first page with a large feature image. Apparently for May Day celebrations in 1961, before Guevara’s death, “portraits of Karl Marx, Raul Castro, the Minister of Armed Forces, and Maj. Ernesto Guevara … [were] being carried by athletes in parade in Havana” (New York Times 1961, also noted in Larson and Lizardo 2007). This was not the Guerrillero Heroico but an official portrait of the sort often trotted out for political marches, and marking Guevara’s face as part of the official visual equipment of the new government, without making his image conspicuous in any special way. With respect to the Guerrillero Heroico, the Cuban context is unique. After the news of Guevara’s death, on Monday, October 16, 19673 the Granma newspaper, official organ of the Communist Party in Cuba, printed a special edition dedicated to Che Guevara. The cover, a full-page image of Korda’s Guerrillero Heroico, was so well received that it was reprinted the next day. On the night of October 18, in the Plaza de la Revolución the same picture was hung as the background for the public stage from which Fidel Castro would give Guevara’s eulogy. According to Cuban historian Reinaldo Morales Campos (2010),4 the impact of Castro’s public eulogy extolling Guevara’s intelligence, courage, and human sensibility as a model revolutionary figure, had the effect of fusing this with Korda’s picture in the minds of those who witnessed the event and “led to the image being taken up as an effigy of the Guerrillero Heroico to highlight his image worldwide” (personal communication). After Feltrinelli’s publication of Guevara’s Bolivian Diaries in early 1968 with the Guerrillero Heroico on the cover and about a million posters to promote the book, there was a global explosion of reproductions, often in the form of protest posters. Larson and Lizardo (2007) observe that, “the New York Times repeatedly connected Che to Marxist social movements in Europe and the Americas” (428) around this time. In the 1960s, a bedroom “without a poster of Che Guevara was hardly furnished at all” (Storey [2001, 88] cited in Larson and Lizardo 2007: 428). Jorge R. Bermúdez (2006) suggests a global transcendence of the Guerrillero Heroico signaling its use in the memorable days of the Parisian barricades in May 1968; in the slaughter of Mexican students in Tlatelolco; in clashes in Milan, during the Prague Spring uprising; and in youth protests in the U.S.A. against the Vietnam War. Larson and Lizardo (2007) mark a significant peak of visibility in the U.S.A. at the time Guevara’s remains were revealed in Bolivia in 1997. Tracing the discourses around Guevara in Spain and the U.S.A. from 1955–2006, they
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describe a tonal shift in the New York Times’ headlines. For example the title, “From Rebel to Pop Icon” in the Arts Pages moves toward emphasizing the photograph’s commercial quality by honing in on its accompaniment by a wave of products sporting the image (428). In this article, Doreen Carvajal interviews Jim Fleischer, of Fischer Skis who was reproducing Che’s image on its promotional materials even while dissociating itself from the man himself: “We felt that the Che image—just the icon and not the man’s doings—represented what we wanted: revolution, extreme change” (New York Times, 1997). Somewhat confusingly, Carvajal (1997) also cites José Borges, a spokesman for the Cuban Mission to the United Nations: “We have always been against any commercial use of his image … one thing is to promote his image and his example, and another thing is to use it as a way to get more money.” Oddly Larson and Lizardo (2007) follow with what they position as the New York Times’ final words on the matter: “In light of this mountain of damning evidence, the New York Times concluded, in Europe and the United States, Che’s image owes its commercial appeal to the absence of political content” (Rosenberg 1997). Making this statement look as if it is a conclusion is misleading because, first, it is taken from a different article than the one they were using, and, second, it is not a conclusion. Rather it is one of the opening paragraphs in Tina Rosenberg’s article ‘‘The World Resurrects Che” written months later on July 20 and followed by a letter to the Editor, written in response on that very day, from a reader named David Silver entitled “Would Che have Turned Capitalist? Never!” (1997). Ironically, in the face of this so-called “mountain of damning evidence” Silver (1997) protests: “Tina Rosenberg jumps to an unwarranted conclusion” grounding his claim with a citation from one of Guevara’s letters to the Editor of Marcha, a Uruguayan weekly newspaper. Silver (1997) underlines Guevara’s stress on the danger of bourgeois ideology and its seductive appeal to oppressed and exploited people: “ ‘in capitalist society man is controlled by a pitiless law usually beyond his comprehension. The alienated human specimen is tied to society as a whole by an individual umbilical cord: the law of value.’” Epitomized in this snapshot of exchanges published in the New York Times, the status of the meaning, memory and value of Che Guevara’s image appears to be hotly contested.
The politics of branding More often than not, copyright law’s purpose is to protect the author’s right to obtain commercial benefit from work,5 but we know this was not Korda’s goal.
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By having potential users of the image ask permission before availing themselves of it, copyright laws also safeguard an author’s general right to control how a work is utilized. Can it be assumed that copyrighting this image means it is automatically pressed into commercial service? Perhaps recent developments in legalities do not allow its meaning, value, and usage to be summed up so simply. For example, there are multitudinous artistic and vernacular renderings of the Guerrillero Heroico that Korda or his estate (managed by his daughter Diana Díaz) do not prosecute or pursue. Evidently, “what it [the image] has come to mean has been the subject of much speculation” (Poyner 2006, 34). Perhaps copyright laws are being applied in an unconventional way, a way that exceeds the frames and models of analysis usually applied through the Berne Convention and the multitude of nation-specific laws. Perhaps we can examine the problematics of how different people take up the image, as well as how the image itself invokes and provokes action, to better understand the dynamics of appropriation. The notions of brand, trademark and logo are often bandied about interchangeably with respect to the Guerrillero Heroico by those who would see its copyrighting as an appropriation of the image as a ‘mark’ of something. For the purposes of this chapter, I refer to logo as a graphic, and logotype as the lettering/words: together logo and logotype form a trademark following the legal discourse. The brand then is the entire package of graphics, name, messaging and communications, visual identity, marketing strategies, and individual experiences with the business, product, or service. Robert E. Moore provides some definitional guidelines for understanding exactly what a brand, or what the essential ingredients for considering something a brand might be. According to Moore “brands are often defined as a form of protection: they protect the consumer from counterfeit goods, and they protect the producer from unfair competition” (2003, 332). Additionally, he observes that in an era where branding processes seem to encompass far more than products and services, and that all sorts of experiences, events, leaders, nations, and even wars are being branded: “the absence from the academic literature of any semiotically sophisticated and ethnographically rich understanding of brands is downright shocking” (332). His article thoroughly addresses this lack, and provides a thoughtful sounding board to which I will periodically return to address some of the confusion around the Guerrillero Heroico. According to one strategist, “if brand names did not exist there would be no trustworthy marketplace” (Moore 2003, 338). One of the key elements of a brand has to do with its trustworthiness or credibility. To elaborate, Moore
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turns to David Aaker, one of the most heavily cited authors in the brand strategy literature, who tells us that a brand is: A distinguished name and/or symbol … intended to identify the goods or services … and to differentiate those goods or services from those of competitors. A brand thus signals to the customer the source of the product, and protects both the customer and the producer from competitors who would attempt to provide products that appear to be identical. (Aaker 2000, 7, in Moore 2003, 338)
Refining the definition of ‘brand,’ Moore (2003) calls it “a name and a logo, joined to a set of regimented associations, with source-identifying indexicals” (339) and concludes: “a brand is a promise” (339). Accordingly, for the Coca-Cola company, we can understand the Polar Bear, Santa Claus, the wavy font type, the specific tone of red, team sponsorships, prizes and contests, songs like “I’d like to teach the world to sing” and slogans such as; “The real thing,” “Always,” “Open happiness,” and “Enjoy” and even the traditional shape of the bottle to all be part of the brand designed to connect individuals to one company. The collection of elements is calculated by branding experts, with the product and tradition of the one company in mind, aiming to make clear links in consumers’ minds. What then would be the characteristics by which one might recognize Korda’s Che image as a brand? More often than not the long hair, beard, star, beret, and eyes looking above and beyond the viewer, bomber jacket or a combination of all or some of these are featured by those who render the image to trigger recognition. One might say it is regularly linked to the notions of dissent, rebellion, revolution, youth, as well as non-conformity, anti-capitalism and anti-imperialism. But these notions lead us to no one place or group or even agreement on the meaning of an idea. Since many people, especially in Canada and the United States do not know who Guevara was or where he was from, or where or when the original photograph was taken, we have situations where an image is often unmoored from its human and historical source. Yet, a key characteristic of a brand has been precisely identified as a credible and trustworthy connection to one source. This source is not necessarily the brand’s designer: rather it is most often the corporation whose product it has been designed to promote, and with which it is inextricably linked. One might imagine the multitudinous variations and interpretations as endless iterations of the original photograph, like a meme, which could take the position of a source. But another complication exists; a photograph is an index with a contiguous relationship to the source, the man himself.
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Following this line of thinking then, the set of all these images would constitute the brand for the original source or photograph and so it might look like a ship whose anchor has lodged itself at the base of its own hull, in a selfreferential circuit. But this is not the case because the image does not exist in a hermetically sealed closed sign system. Rather, it is part of some “… collective equipment that everyone is in a position to use, not in order to be subjected to their authority but as tools to probe the contemporary world” (Bourriaud 2005, 9). Each of the image’s iterations also simultaneously bears the marks of the particular artist/designer and thus references the specific time, place, event, or person that has intersected with the image in that rendering. This would seem to make the Guerrillero Heroico the actual antithesis of a brand if we accept Michael Casey’s (2009) account of the logic of brand protection where: “Large companies are sticklers for the integrity of their brands. They worry about the size, colour, dimensions, and appropriate uses of their corporate logo … No McDonald’s franchisee would ever be allowed to put up a blue Golden Arches sign” (334). Since “the most important characteristic of a brand is its credibility” (Erdem and Swait 2004, 192), the protection of brands is serious business.6 Another aspect of branding to consider is the manner in which a group or corporation enacts their branding strategy. Invariably, they orchestrate the time and place of the “launch” in a hierarchical mass-produced fashion. Moore (2003) explains: In the process of producing brands, branding professionals attempt to capture, and turn to their advantage, a set of fairly recondite—even, ineffable—facts about how brands circulate in society, even as they try to create the conditions that allow brands to circulate. So circulation is fundamentally part of the production process, even if not quantifiably so. The use of ethnographic methods represents an effort to uncover and understand likely patterns of circulation and consumption, in advance of production, every bit as much as efforts to develop the ‘brand personality’ are attempts further to define them. (352)
Because a company’s products combine both tangible and intangible features, “value no longer inheres in the commodity itself as a tangible thing; rather, value inheres in something else, something less tangible: the aura, the simulacrum, the reproduction (as opposed to the original), the brand” (Moore 2003, 331). The immaterial aspects are unstable: they are open to interpretation and can shift with time and circumstance. Therefore, corporations go to great pains to protect the integrity of their brand names with complicated policy architectures because brands are inherently vulnerable. For example, when golf professional
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Tiger Woods was caught in an adultery scandal in 2009, Gatorade and other private enterprises stopped endorsing him and distanced themselves7 because as one branding expert noted, the Woods brand “was founded upon prestige, mystique … and an aura of elusive untouchability,” but now “we all suddenly know more about his bottom-feeding behavior than we ever cared to” (Elliott 2010). We learn, in fact, that he was actually excessively touchable. Woods had been an image of prowess based on precision, integrity, and clarity of focus that (some might imply) reflected a clear conscience. Woods had compromised that image with contradictory behavior. In this scenario, those who attribute the amount of an enterprise’s private market value in part to its name reevaluated the choice to endorse an athlete that might negatively impact its name, or, more crucially, its market value. The need to protect and control the perception of a brand’s “name” shows not only the existence of inherent vulnerability to undesirable interpretations, but also that branding strategy is actually about deciding on a limited set of predetermined meanings deemed acceptable for a brand. In other words a branded product is: … partly a thing, and partly language. The brand name functions as a ‘rigid designator’ in their terminology of Kripke (1972): it communicates information about the source, producer, and/or type of thing, and can provide quite rich sociocultural and ideological ‘captioning’ for the object (including by ‘keying’ it to definable activities) through the radical use of ‘condensation symbolism’ (Sapir, 1949 [1929])”. (in Moore 2003, 334)
Simply put, terms like: rigid designator, ideological caption, or condensation symbolism describe the process of linking an object to a fiction designed to create a desire to consume them both, as J. B. Twitchell (2004) acknowledges in the Journal of Consumer Research, “a brand is simply a story attached to a manufactured object” (484). With its ultimate goal of selling products and augmenting commercial value, branding is a kind of planning, control, and action which requires a centralized and concerted effort that is nonexistent in the case of the Guerrillero Heroico. But at the very core of this process is the manipulation of cultural sensibilities. Branding isn’t just the unloading of stories on manufactured products but actually the systematic suturing of cultural texts into commercial products. Patronizing those products becomes a vicarious way of being part of the desirable realm of socially sanctioned values. This image emerged somewhat organically, spontaneously and largely low-tech as in the case of street art and murals, outside of Cuba and more
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intentionally, through the state apparatus, within Cuba. The effervescing of the image here and there through different media and created by different hands almost simultaneously challenges the establishment of a clear line tracing its provenance, and perhaps that is part of its appeal. Still, this image has a very different history within Cuba than it does outside of Cuba; consequently I examine them separately.
Within Cuba One of the most relentlessly strident critiques of the Guerrillero Heroico’s uses in Cuba is contained in Michael Casey’s (2009) book, Che’s Afterlife: The Legacy of an Image. Marshaling a carnival of opinions, anecdotes and interviews for support, Casey’s overriding thrust is that the Guerrillero Heroico is the “quintessential capitalist brand” (30). However, in one of the most scholarly and detailed book reviews to date, historian Maurice Isserman (2009, online) observes Casey’s “book would have benefited greatly from a sturdier historical frame” and that he “seems overly enamored with the language of advertising and consumption.” Casey’s (2009) book provides detailed anecdotal accounts and personal interviews in Cuba, Argentina, Venezuela, Bolivia, and Miami8 as well as a great deal of information on Korda himself that are worth addressing despite the historical inaccuracies that perforate his efforts to position Che Guevara as solely a socially constructed icon. From the beginning Casey (2009) positions the Cuban revolution as “a top-selling cultural product, an international brand, and … its ultimate expression: the Che-T shirt” (88). In a puzzling shift, however, he also writes: “Che was already available in 1968 in a wide variety of political brands” (129). Together these statements seem nonsensical: that the Cuban revolution is a brand represented by a Che t-shirt but that Che is simultaneously a variety of different political brands. If we make note of the brand literature alone, this would be at odds with the very raison d’être of branding. The representing of “different political brands” clouds our understanding of what Che represents, thus compromising clarity and credibility. Erdem and Swait’s (1998) study establishes that, “the clarity (i.e. lack of ambiguity) of the product information contained in a brand is an antecedent to brand credibility” (192). It would seem the image is behaving in a way that is difficult to commercialize according to a brand strategy, and therefore difficult to categorize simplistically as a brand.
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Casey’s ahistoricism begs the question of history’s relevance, and consequently politics’ relevance for the so-called brand of the Guerrillero Heroico making it problematic for him to claim historical and political grounds for the image’s prominence in the Cuban public’s imaginary. His claim that the “Korda image launched into public consciousness in Cuba, where it was in effect employed as a logo or brand for Castro’s PR campaign” (93), and assumption that the “general public, which had not seen a single photograph of Che since his mysterious disappearance in April 1965, was now shown an image” (186) are swiftly debunked by Isserman (2009, online): Mainstream American media, as well as the radical press, had kept Che’s name and face in the public eye for years: from his days as Castro’s sidekick, to his disappearance from view in Cuba in 1965, to his life as an international man of mystery until October 9, 1967,
So how did this myth of the Guerrillero Heroico as brand for Castro and Cuba arise? What happened in Cuba in the decades prior to the copyright lawsuit? First, the year 1968 was officially declared the year of the Guerrillero Heroico in Cuba to memorialize Guevara. Artists and designers in Cuba generated numerous works representing Che and the revolution to commemorate the first anniversary of Guevara’s assassination. At the same time, artists were developing techniques and styles for poster art and evolving the unique genre of Cuban poster art. In those years Cuban designers were moving away from influences of advertising and realism and toward creative interpretation as an artistic vanguard influenced by pop art, art deco, and other Japanese and North American art movements. The international political context included large movements mobilizing against wars, dictatorships in Latin America and Africa, colonialism and the accompanying assassinations of important leftist leaders around the world. All of these movements against imperialist power and people fighting for social progress flowed into each other. This context created a creative environment where Korda’s image became a malleable tool to be contextualized artistically in order to comment on history or current events, and produce salient political observations. The Guerrillero Heroico quickly became a glyph in the exploration of collective memory by Cuban artists. Larson and Lizardo (2007) describe collective memories as “traces of the past remembered and reenacted in the present, periodically reinvigorated in commemorations, celebrations, poetry, images, and other symbolic displays” (431). In their study, they analyze how
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memories of Che Guevara are produced after interviewing 3,000 Spaniards across social, economic, and generational lines between 1991 and 1993. Larson and Lizardo (2007) conclude that, “Instead of his memory falling victim to trivialization by commodification … remembering Che Guevara has become a highly structured collective act of distinction” (431). The artistic and political uses of the image run counter to a branding effort by their very nature as non-commoditized and favorable to appropriation for further artistic comment. Billboards, signs, and all kinds of advertising had gradually disappeared from the Cuban public sphere under Castro’s government from 1961 onward. The focus in post-revolution Cuba shifted from celebrating the qualities of products and their consumption, to political state-run messaging explicitly designated as informative and educational. As part of the political signage, Che’s image appears representing the Communist party, announcements regarding social works, and on the occasions of the anniversary of his death or other commemorative events. His face thus became a representation of the revolution accruing meanings on a specific register congruent with Guevara’s own stance and prior governmental position. Additionally, Cuban institutions with relations abroad (like the health system) used it to express messages of solidarity with what they perceived as similar revolutionary causes (Campos 2010, personal communication). That is, an institutional use of the image for certain kinds of communication is politically but not commercially motivated. In Castro’s Cuba, the image behaved in a metonymic, rather than metaphoric manner. Its relationship to the prototype was factually similar (icon) and contiguous (index), rather than imputed (symbol).9 Campos (2010, personal communication) recalls that 1985 onward saw a resurgence of limited advertising activities in Cuba. In an effort to manage foreign firms and entities accustomed to publicity campaigns and advertising norms authorized to operate in Cuba, protective paternal policies were established to regulate the iconography of women and children, and policies prohibiting the use of national symbols, revolutionary martyrs and heroes. Campos (2010) provides this background to show that the Cuban government’s use of the graphic image of Che was devoid of commercial interests. Political signage used by organizations is not sold, as Campos (2010) notes, but distributed through internal structures to fulfill social functions. However much one might push this as a branding effort, the image use in this case does not fulfill the requirements (personal communication). After 1992, following the U.S.S.R.’s dissolution which caused an economic crisis that annihilated 85 percent of Cuba’s trade, the Cuban graphic industry
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was paralyzed due to lack of funds, and the sale of political posters to tourists and foreigners was initiated (Campos 2010, personal communication). The sales included Korda’s image of Guevara primarily as a cost recovery effort to keep people employed. Interestingly, that commercialization and sale was not extended to the Cuban public. In 1994, many people who thought the Cuban revolution had come to its end took advantage of the crisis to publish and profit from reproductions of signs and posters with emblematic images of Che and of the revolution without crediting artists or the authorizing institutions. These historical events can be seen as forerunners to the copyright lawsuit that Korda eventually launched. To make matters worse for the island, the U.S. government saw the crisis as an opportunity to finish off the Cuban economy and bring down President Castro. On an initiative by Robert Torricelli, member of the U.S. House of Representatives, The Torricelli Act was enacted in 1992. This act intensified the harshness of the economic blockade on Cuba by preventing food and medicine from being shipped to Cuba.10 An intense global solidarity movement from communities supporting Cuba emerged in response. As Cuba moved to establish ways to protect items it defined as crucial to Cuban national heritage, it installed copyright regulations for books and documents authorized to leave the country. Under these conditions, Guevara’s widow Aleida March created the Che Guevara Studies Center, to house photos and documents salient to Guevara’s historical legacy. For Campos (2010) the Center sees the prevention of the “improper use” or “for commercial ends” of the photos and posters as part of its task (personal communication). Since the Guerrillero Heroico is considered by Cubans to be part of their national heritage, they exercise some control over its use. The Guevara children are involved in the Center and on occasion publicly criticize what they consider unscrupulous uses of the image of their father. As recently as 2008, the Guardian correspondent Rory Carroll wrote a piece called, “Guevara Children Denounce Che Branding” where Aleida Guevara “denounced the commercialization [sic] of her father’s image … ‘Something that bothers me now is the appropriation of the figure of Che that has been used to make enemies from different classes. It’s embarrassing.” She added: “We don’t want money, we demand respect.” But Carroll (2008, online) is also compelled to comment on the image itself, writing, “If you want to shift more products or give your corporate image a bit of edge, the Argentine revolutionary’s face and name are there to be used, like commercial gold dust” and on Cuba, “Cuba’s government has used the image to promote its revolution and to rake in tourist dollars through state-run stores which sell Che paraphernalia”. The appeal of any image based on Korda’s
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Guerrillero Heroico is indisputable; and, so far, it seems inexhaustible. But Carroll’s assumption regarding the state-run stores is inaccurate unless considered within the context of a specific reaction to a historical event. Additionally the way copyrighting is mobilized, and the way different actors are involved and influence the image’s use, do not add up to a convincing indication that the Cuban state is moving toward a wholesale commercialization of the Guerrillero Heroico. Campos (2010) describes Korda’s daughter, Diana Díaz, the inheritor of Korda’s work, as having the right to protect that photograph using copyright laws (personal communication). However even her rights are within a specific framework. Cuban copyright policy holds that when an institution pays a salary for someone to occupy a post that permits their production of a work, he or she is recognized as the creator or author but the work is property of the institution. And when a work becomes iconic or emblematic, it grows to be part of the national heritage. Campos (2010) insists Che’s image retains its original symbolism in Cuba, and does not function within the nation as a commercial logo on a souvenir (personal communication). Hernandez-Reguant’s (2008) relegation of the image of Che Guevara to an “object of state worship since his death in 1967” (254) seems debatable for many on the island.
From Cuba with love: Cubans “exporting Guevara’s image” Cuban institutions use the Guerrillero Heroico in relations abroad to express messages of solidarity in that they are acting in the image of Che. For example, doctors sent to aid Haitians after the 2010 earthquake wore Che Guevara t-shirts. This kind of official Cuban usage is exploited by Michael Casey (2009) to situate interest not along ideological grounds but “economic factors” (153). If we suppose that someone suddenly discovers that Cuba sends doctors and educators to developing nations and thus mistakenly sees it as a branding attempt, what kind of branding would they see it as? The presence of Cuban doctors in Bolivia in 2006 is described by Casey as a “re-brand[ing]” effort to portray Cuba “as a source of medicine and education services worldwide” (189). Yet the Cuban practice of sending doctors to hardship zones has been in place for decades (the first medical brigade of 58 doctors was sent to Algeria in 1963) and certainly does not receive sufficient press to warrant it a re-branding attempt. In fact, when Hurricane Katrina ripped through the southern U.S. in 2005, the Cuban government responded to the governor of Louisiana’s call for aid offering,
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… within 48 hours 1,600 doctors, trained to deal with such catastrophes, would arrive with all the necessary equipment plus 36 tonnes of medical supplies. This offer, and another made directly to President George Bush, went unanswered. In the catastrophe at least 1,800 people, most of them poor, died for lack of aid and treatment. (Ospina 2006)
In 2007, “Cuban doctors volunteering in Bolivia performed free cataract surgery for Mario Teran, the Bolivian army sergeant who killed the legendary guerrilla leader Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara in captivity” (AAP Brisbane Times 2007). While Casey observed Cuban doctors wearing Che t-shirts in Bolivia, he failed to ask them why they did so. After all, Che Guevara was also a doctor. With all the focus on the image, it may benefit us to observe the anti-capitalist effect of Cuba’s 25,000 volunteer doctors that by March 2006 were working in 68 nations. “This is more than even the World Health Organisation can deploy, while Médecins Sans Frontières sent only 2,040 doctors and nurses abroad in 2003, and 2,290 in 2004” (Ospina Le Monde 2006). The message of free medical care is not lost on those who might otherwise not see a doctor in their entire lives. And visually, those people witness Cuban doctors acting in and through the image of Che (on their shirts), layering meanings onto it that are salient to their daily lives. It is for good reason that: “The medical associations are afraid that if the Cuban medics bring down prices or even offer some services free, medical treatment will cease to be a profitable, elitist service” (Ospina Le Monde, 2006). If this is a branding effort then it is an undermining of capitalism itself, of which perhaps Guevara would approve. The practice has been sustained long term, quietly saving many lives.11 I have emphasized many details to show clearly how “branding” language fails to accurately depict the social and cultural impact of this image. It is misleading to conflate Cuban use of the image in Bolivia with Bolivian appropriations but it is nevertheless useful to examine the way the discourse is mobilized. For example, Bolivian salesmen such as Fernando Porras use the Guevara image on all kinds of paraphernalia: in this case he targets his market of 16- to 20-year-olds (Casey 2009, 211). In Bolivia, President Evo Morales’ government uses this Guevara image politically to link with notions of Cuban independence but also to remind its citizens of Guevara’s death in Bolivia and the reasons behind it. For Casey (2009), Porras’ “shameless commercial exploitation” is tantamount to the Bolivian government using the image: “Porras might have been exploiting Che to sell rum and cola, but Morales and his supporters were using him to sell ideas” (213). He concludes, “… what we find is the same symbol representing contradicting brands” (213). This statement no
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longer positions the image as a brand, reducing it instead to an ingredient, like the logo or symbol. But the same symbol cannot represent contradicting brands and still be viable. Therefore, Casey’s readers are presented with a false analogy, that is, two cases pressed into service in a simplified and misleading parallel, yet not sufficiently parallel for readers to accept a claim of connection between them. The confusion that can result from such entwining and contradictory narratives might indicate that part of what is required in our image-saturated societies is a more nuanced language to describe what is happening on the visual level, in other words we need more sophisticated visual literacies to decipher these discourses. For understanding image use, Larson and Lizardo (2007) provide three options. They state that the malleability of a memory (or an image) can be reduced in three ways (Olick and Robbins 1998, 107 in Larson and Lizardo 2007, 438). First, actors using the memory of Che as an instrumental symbol, second a canonical or institutional use of the image, and finally the routines marking consumer goods that keep the image visible on products such as t-shirts and posters (438). All three reductions have come into play for the Guerrillero Heroico’s use inside and outside Cuba so far, but do not indicate a convincing shift in signifying practices of authorship because the photograph and its derivatives as cultural products of artistic labor did not translate into copyright-directed commodities for individual profit and corporate speculation. The Guerrillero Heroico is more elusive than that: no one disputes its ownership: the contest is over how it is used.
Outside Cuba: A brand without a product? Outside of Cuba, the use of the Guerrillero Heroico was hardly regulated, regimented or controlled except for its ban in some nations (i.e. in Kenya possession of the image was punishable by imprisonment or death). For the most part, artists and movements focused on overtly and broadly political uses: “Most commentators agree that Che has become a general symbol of various causes and political movements, but here exists wide disagreement and confusion in the literature as to what exactly his image has become a symbol of ” (Larson and Lizardo 2007, 433–4). It has been widely established that: As early as the student movements of 1968, the image of Che Guevara had already acquired a measure of status as a symbol for the student movement
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(Eyerman and Jamison, 1991: 90; Jasper, 1997; Zolov, 1999). Furthermore, given the continued presence of posters and T-shirts bearing his image at contemporary global justice rallies (Lechner and Boli, 2005: 153), it appears that Che Guevara continues to stand for the same complex set of values and causes usually associated with the ‘new social movements’ (NSMs) that emerged in the 1960s.
Yet, in 1999, just before the copyright suit against Smirnoff, the flamboyant fashion designer Jean Paul Gaultier ran an ad with an artistic rendering of the Guerrillero Heroico sporting his brand of sunglasses. Accordingly British writer/ curator Rick Poyner (2006) could glibly write: “Since the 1990s, the Korda Che has been adopted as a style icon. Madonna strikes a Che pose in a beret for the cover of her American Life album (created by trendy Paris design team M/M) … No one seriously imagines they are attempting to bring about the downfall of capitalism” (V & A Magazine 39, my emphasis). Style icon or not, the news about trying to bring down the capitalist nation/state does not seem to have reached the FARC (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia—Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia— People’s Army)12 in Colombia (however problematic their political program has become), nor has it reached the less violent but also armed Zapatistas in Mexico. Again, Larson and Lizardo’s (2007) research tells us, “Che Guevara, in stark contrast to most other major twentieth-century revolutionary figures of the left (e.g. Mao, Lenin, Trotsky) continues to be a vibrant symbol and galvanizing figure for contemporary anti-systemic movements, from the Zapatista rebels in
Figure 2.2: “Guerrillero colombiano de las FARC, montañas del Caquetá, Colombia” (2001) by Venezuelan photographer Pedro Ruíz
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Figure 2.3: Zapatista Mural (photo credit C. Cambre)
Mexico and Basque separatists in Spain to Palestinian nationalists in the Middle East” (426). They emphasize, “The Zapatistas in Mexico have flaunted images of Che on their clothes, banners, flags, and posters since 1994” (429). The simultaneous phenomenon of the Korda-inspired image of Che Guevara on all kinds of kitschy products such as refrigerator magnets and
Figures 2.4 and 2.5: Che Kitch (by C. Cambre)
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coffee mugs, creates an irony when juxtaposed with the figure of someone who fought to the death against, among other things, “the hegemony of American-style consumer capitalism” (Larson and Lizardo 2007, 426). If the image were to be considered a brand, it would be demonstrating instability, if not utter unreliability. The professional literature on brand strategy examines different brand behaviors that might lead to some hypotheses regarding the behavior and uses of this image. Moore (2003) examines three “insider phenomena of branding: genericide, ingredient branding, and so-called ‘viral marketing’ ” (336) to probe the troubled relationship between a word (brand name) and an object (product). Viral marketing is less salient because it focuses on branding services and communications through email attachments where a sender inadvertently endorses the brand advertised in their messages. Genericide and ingredient branding however, may have some conceptual traction with the case of Guevara’s image. When a brand name becomes synonymous with a product regardless of who produces it, it becomes generic, so that the trademark is unable to carry the message producers want to communicate. Moore (2003) tells us, “Brand enters upon phenomenal reality as a mode of connection, of communication, between two parties” (335). When this fails it is called “genericide” because the loss of the identifying power of the name essentially kills the brand. Kleenex, for example, was once a brand, but since the word became so ubiquitous that it was used for any tissue, the trademark became insignificant. Those clamouring for the Guerrillero Heroico to be considered a brand push for the image to be understood as the brand for an intangible or virtual thing such as the notion of rebellion. Leaving aside contradictions with the professional literature, let us think through the genericide scenario. The image has been used widely as some designer-cool type look and at the same time adapted to so many different kinds of anti-something struggles that Robert Massari “Italian publisher, wine merchant, and head of his country’s Che Guevara Foundation” can say, “There are probably forty million in the world who have that image. And if you ask them what it means to them, they’d all have a different answer” (Casey 2009, 336). Not only would we have a genericide in the register of historical and political events with the delinking of the image from its context (and source meaning), and genericide commercially where it cannot bring to mind any one product, but we would also have genericide in terms of its inability to consistently link to one idea. Erdem and Swait (2004) take up Kottler’s (1997) definition of brand as a “name, term, sign, symbol or design, or a combination of them which is
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intended to identify the goods and services of one seller or a group of sellers and to differentiate them from those of competitors” (Erdem and Swait 2004, 191). More importantly, they emphasize the crucial roles played by brands as a factor in consumer choice. There exists no Guerrillero Heroico brand of any particular product for a consumer to even be able to consider and choose between. Since the product is virtually irrelevant, can we consider this a classic case of genericide in the way branding strategists would classify it? Not really, it is on another register and does not make one product generic. If we consider that people do not buy products but brands, anything with Che’s face on it will sell regardless of its inability to communicate the goals of a seller, so it sells but not as a brand. In ingredient branding, the product rather than the name is vulnerable, “one branded product is absorbed or incorporated into another (think NutraSweet, as a branded ingredient of Diet Pepsi, or ‘Intel Inside’)” (Moore 2003, 337). Because consumers can tune in to the ingredient and consume the “host product” almost as an effect rather than a cause of their choice, the branded ingredient can lift off and adhere to other hosts thereby making the product vulnerable. Within the ingredient branding phenomenon, there is a possibility of “image transfer” (Moore 2003, 349). In other words, when paired with a leading manufacturer, “the ingredient brand takes advantage of their premium image … [and] signals that the ingredient is of a high quality” (Moore 2003, 349). Additionally, the branded ingredient can absorb the status of the host brand by association, and can subsequently pass it on to other possible host brands. Ingredient branding makes a product vulnerable because the ingredient can just as easily attach to a competing product thus making the host product marginal and weakening its inherent perceived value in the marketplace. If the branded ingredient is transferred elsewhere, the original product could easily disappear. Uniquely in the case of the Guerrillero Heroico, the ingredient is a virtual and fluid one in that it is whatever the image may represent to a given individual. The commercial rhetorical gesture of putting Che Guevara’s face on a pot of lip-gloss thus shares meaning with (and gains cultural capital and power from) a broad social movement, however illegitimately. The product is more or less irrelevant, in the way we have seen for objects attached to branded ingredients and is clearly a case of unsuccessful branding. Furthermore, in this case the ingredient can behave in unpredictable ways. Kopytoff (1986) reminds us that commoditization is “best looked at as a process of becoming rather than an all-or-none state of being” (73). He adds, “extensive commoditization is not a
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feature of commoditization per se, but of the exchange technology … associated with it …” (73) so that the way this image of Che is mobilized has a great deal to do with its immediate context. Durkheim (1912) held that societies needed to set aside a certain portion of their environment marking it as “sacred.” Things marked by societies as sacred, such as monuments, often become so through a process of singularization where they are situated as outside the commodity sphere. A diamond, for example, becomes a crown jewel when it becomes part of a regent’s regalia. Items can also be singularized through restriction of numbers. It is important to recall that the state of being a non-commodity, however, is not equal to being sacred. Something can be priceless by being above level or below (e.g. Manioc is hardly tradable because it is worth nothing in a Western exchange sphere). Commodities can be de-activated by becoming personalized, or terminal in that they expire and cannot continue to be exchanged, as in the case of food or services. Additionally, public opinion is against commoditizing what has publicly been marked as singular and thus sacred. African art, for example, becomes “collectible” to mask the former feeling that it was immoral to sell it for money (Kopytoff 1986). People also yearn for singularization as evidenced by cultures of collecting. The paradox is: “as one makes things more singular and worthy of being collected, thus more valuable and if valuable they acquire a price and become a commodity and their singularity is to that extent undermined” (Kopytoff 1986, 81). The singularity of something is confirmed by its periodic appearance in the commodity sphere: a Picasso, for instance, “shows its ‘priceless-ness’ by the feeling it’s worth more than the money … people feel need to ‘defend’ themselves against ‘charge’ of ‘merchandising art’ (Kopytoff 1986, 83). The status of a thing is fluid and changeable until the actual moment of sale. Through a Marxist lens, one would understand the commodity value as determined by social relations, and allowed to be socially endowed with a fetishlike power unrelated to its true worth. If Moore (2003) is correct in saying, “Successful branding, then, is successful communication, successful in the sense that it ‘secures uptake’ from its interlocutors in the market” (335), then the Guerrillero Heroico cannot be considered successful as a brand. Some individuals may have just as many reasons not to buy a product with this image on it as others who do buy it; culture, class and ethnic identity of course come into play. Perhaps the contested terrain of this image and its progeny can be illuminated by tracing its activities as art and by looking at how artists appropriate and manipulate the image.
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Art of appropriation—appropriation of art Copyright laws are part and parcel of institutional use of the Guerrillero Heroico by states and organizations for ideological purposes, and of commercial use by corporations as radical chic bereft of historical memory. In a different way, these laws also bear on uses by groups like self-identified left-wing soccer supporters (such as the South Winners of Olympique de Marseille and their passionate north–south rivalry with Paris), “landless workers in Brazil (1997), striking university students in Mexico City (1999), peace activists in Italy (2002)” (Larson and Lizardo 2007, 429). Often such groups take the image as a marker of group solidarity and are usually seen using a mass-produced version of the Guerrillero Heroico. The befuddled claims that this image owes its fame, wide reproduction, and distribution to its not being copyrighted are due partly to their overlooking its status as fodder for artists. These kinds of claims also ignore the historical fact that before 1976 in the U.S., the term of copyright was only 28 years, after which the license would have to be renewed otherwise the work would become part of the public domain. Had the U.S. Congress not changed copyright law, Guerrillero Heroico, along with a multitude of other works, would likely be in the public domain today.13 The unique situation of this photograph as the most reproduced image in the history of photography, and its copious derivatives, reveals how the creation of value in Western society is inextricable from the cultural context of a particular object. Additionally, collective memory research indicates “that the culture industry that sells his [Guevara’s] image and the anti-systemic movements that revere him are emblematic of a contest over his memory” (Larson and Lizardo 2007, 447). It is important to recall that even Time magazine recognizes Ernesto Guevara as one of the top 100 most influential people of the twentieth century; this is not a photograph of just anyone. Tension exists in every economy between forces driving toward commoditization, countered by those of cultures and individuals who discriminate, classify, compare, and sacralize: they are intertwined in multiple and subtle ways, and are constantly in flux. Che Guevara’s image has not been domesticated by capitalism or the tension around it would not exist. Can we learn from what happens with the Guerrillero Heroico in the hands of artists, and from individual hand-made vernacular appropriations and figurations, borrowings or extractions, and inspirations this image bestows?
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Artists have always appropriated or quoted ideas, techniques, approaches, colors, shapes, or a combination of these. Whether borrowing from a master to whom they were apprenticed or from a combination of inspiring images, or even from natural or environmental surrounds, the appropriation of material for artistic purposes has been widely acknowledged as standard practice. However, with the blurring of the boundaries between material and virtual objects, and shifting notions of ownership, more and more artists are being accused of stealing images and ideas. Correspondingly, the policing of the image-scape is also increasing. Nevertheless, thanks in part to digital media, proliferation of derivative arts continues unabated. Part of this spread could be due to the unprecedented growth of “postproduction art”14 in French art historian Nicolas Bourriaud’s (2005) terminology. In Romana Cohen’s (2007, online) interview with Lincoln Cushing for PLAZM magazine, Cushing states, “creative appropriation is the lingua franca of activists, and there is no shame in artful reinterpretation of powerful imagery.” In a fascinating interview with legendary French filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard, Lañamme and Kaganski (2010) ask him whether he claims rights to his movie images. Godard responds in the negative and asserts that although many artists appropriate his images online, he does not feel robbed. He explains his position through a series of comparisons: “… Norman Mailer’s book on Henry Miller, is 80% Miller and 20% Mailer. In the sciences, no scientist pays copyright fees to use the formula developed by a colleague … in my film there is another kind of borrowing not citations simply extractions. Like an injection that takes a blood sample for analysis” (Lañamme and Kaganski 2010, online). In line with his thinking, Godard explicitly appropriates a scene from Agnès Varda’s Les Plages d’Agnès. Since he uses the scene for artistic commentary he does not see it as a violation in any way nor does he pretend to have authored it. He simply did not simply create his own images because the metaphor in Varda’s film was ideal for his purposes though carrying a different signification. Without regard for the original, he recontextualized those images: “Simply, those images seemed perfect for what I wanted to do … It was exactly what I wanted to express. So I grabbed the images because they already existed” (Lañamme and Kaganski 2010, online). For Godard then, as is the case for many artists, the Varda scene was simply viewed as pre-existing material that he was free to use artistically. His philosophy is instructive: “I do not believe in the concept of work. There are works, there are some new, but the work as a whole, the great work, is something that does not interest me. I prefer to talk of a road” (my translation from Lañamme and Kaganski 2010, online). The processual, unfinished nature of Godard’s view
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of his art leads him to view his experiences of the works of others as part of a living mental, spiritual, or emotional nourishment through his incorporating, consuming, digesting, and changing others’ creations in order to come up with a layered, nuanced, and allusive piece that participates in additional conversations, a polyphonic approach. Perhaps this kind of “stealing” is behind Pablo Picasso’s long misunderstood platitude, “Good artists copy, great artists steal.” In other words, it is not simply about adopting ideas from others, or even of appropriating aesthetic flourishes and stylings practiced by master artists. Rather, the zone of activity is one where the Guerrillero Heroico in this case, inhabits different renderings and works as part of the artists’ visual vocabulary and commentary through artifice on a political or social idea. The “stealing” of this image, allows it to both participate in salient conversations, and add its own layer of meaning. However there is a code of behavior among artists, particularly those working in political ways. Part of the concern artists such as Mark Vallen (2010, online) voice, is that with the soaring use, reuse and expropriation of images, the “relentless mining and distortion of history will turn out to be detrimental for art, leaving it hollowed-out and meaningless in the process”. As we have noted, this is part of the debate around the Guerrillero Heroico. Vallen and other artist/activists such as Lincoln Cushing, Josh MacPhee, and Favianna Rodriguez have publicly discussed the nature of plagiarism vis-à-vis subvertisement and parody. Cushing (2007, online) expresses the complex unwritten understanding between artists as being highly conditioned: … “IF it’s non-commercial, and IF one isn’t claiming personal credit, and IF it’s helping a progressive cause, it’s pretty much OK to grab other art and use it” (online). The model is less dominant than it was during the 1960s but has found new formulations in agreements such as those configured through CopyLeft and Creative Commons.15
Cushing sees the guidelines as a beginning, but feels they need to go farther to protect the history or enable the tracing of the trajectory of an artwork. The issue for Cushing and others is on the register of a moral economy where an artist who intentionally copies artworks must not pretend to have been the originator of it, or attempt to deceive viewers. Not only do Cushing and Vallen advocate for a transparent process, but they also support the appropriation of existing art to maintain the spirit in which it was created. For example, if an image was created for political and nonprofit purposes, then its derivatives must remain free of copyright restrictions. Artists who would profit from an exploitation of images such as the Guerrillero Heroico are seen as sellouts that ally with
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those very forces that the image was seen to protest against. MacPhee notes: “… Posters and graphics made in the heat of political struggles are often made by anonymous individuals or groups that want to keep the images in the public domain for use in further struggle” and decries those who would “personally capitalize on the generosity of others and privatize and enclose the visual commons” (in Vallen 2010, online). In the debate on attribution and recognition, this kind of “stealing” is seen as a copywrong, to adopt Siva Vaidhyanathan’s neologism, contributing to historical amnesia and cultural imperialism. The metamorphosis of corporatizing a work shifts it from being considered art to the realm of brands. The difference does not merely reside in the articulation but in the nexus of social and cultural circumstances. Acknowledging that the language of branding “is a product of modern U.S. capitalism” Casey (2009) claims, “it is really just a commercially practical way to describe how symbols and images are used in many forms of communication” (340). And yet, as many of the examples I have cited show, not all communication is commercial, neither is all adoption nor the use of symbolic representation. Among the many artists inspired by the image of Che Guevara based on the Guerrillero Heroico are the political cartoonists Carlos Latuff and Allan McDonald. They can be characterized as “semionauts” (Bourriaud 2005, 18) in that they invent paths through visual culture by using pre-existing forms and imagining links and relations between a network of signs. Skillfully and eloquently they navigate a vast sea of images cartographically following ephemeral and temporary lines in order to reveal alternative meanings, while at the same time fusing moments of production and consumption. Thus, “the culture of use implies a profound transformation of the status of the work of art: going beyond its traditional role as a receptacle of the artist’s vision, it now functions as an active agent, a musical score, an unfolding scenario, a framework that possesses autonomy and materiality to varying degrees” (Bourriaud 2005, 20). Latuff is particularly known for his provocative and controversial work on the Palestinian–Israeli challenging mainstream versions of the conflict. The kaffiyeh, an Arab-Palestinian scarf and Che are brought together as two global symbols of resistance against oppression and coloniality, bringing into alliance the struggles in Latin America with those in the Middle East. This particular image was also reincarnated as a t-shirt and worn in protest marches in England and elsewhere. Latuff comments, “my intention is to associate a universal, established and popular icon of resistance with the Palestinian struggle for independence.
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Figure 2.6: Palestine Che (Courtesy of Carlos Latuff)
Using well-known symbols and giving them a new dimension and meaning is part of my job as a political cartoonist and image-maker” (personal communication 2009). Likewise, McDonald, who has dedicated a great deal of his life to anti-capitalist struggle and social and political criticism, find inspiration in the image. In his articulation, the Korda image becomes the “sacred” heart of Jesus, and explicitly allies their spirits but places Che as the inspiration, or source at the center of Christ in an odd thought-provoking alliance. I see these images as being beyond the art of appropriation, inhabiting instead “… a culture of the use of forms, a culture of constant activity of signs based on a collective ideal of sharing” (Bourriaud 2005, 17). For artists involved in programing forms rather than producing them, Che’s face has become a tool to manipulate and interrogate in order to produce different results. Interestingly this image manifesting from the original photograph is also acting in its own right by acting upon the artist affectively being “independently capable of stirring the forces of human imagination and of tapping into deep-seated longings for a better world” (Casey 2009, 342). The continuing motivation of these and other artists to use this image, confirms its persistent resonance in the visual public sphere; it continues to speak, and both artists and their audiences are listening.
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Figure 2.7: Che Christ (courtesty of Allan McDonald)
Conclusion Hernandez-Reguant’s (2008) wrap-up, where he states, “However, at the end of the affair, it was still unclear whether the now copyrighted Che—and his legacy to Cuban late socialism—had really beaten the forces of capitalism or rather surreptitiously joined them” (256), is really just the beginning. True, many would like to dismiss this image as having been incorporated into the market logic of the culture industry, and consequently have lost its power as a political symbol. Most would agree that the Guerrillero Heroico lives a “… strange and by now unstoppable afterlife since his murder in Bolivia in 1967, at the age of 39” (Poyner 2006, 34). Despite having strong characteristics of a material commodity in its ability to be a repository for added value, it also
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resists the force of iconographic commercialization and continues to be a viable political banner. In part, this may be because of its material iterations. “Webb Keane (2003) … observes that part of the power of material objects in society consists of their openness to ‘external’ events and their resulting potential for mediating the introduction of ‘contingency’ into even the most hegemonic of social orders” (Moore 2003, 334). The exceptional case of Che Guevara embodies the contest visibly being waged between the culture industry and anti-systemic movements that some scholars contend “is shaped and manipulated by elites in order to establish dominant, hegemonic meanings and interpretations of the past, while others argue that groups can reconstruct and recover memories in order to imbue them with new counterhegemonic interpretations (Bromberg and Fine 2002; Fine 2001, in Larson and Lizardo 2007, 427). Either way, the presumption that Guevara’s image is little more than a fashionable accessory sapped of all political meaning, or that processes of commoditization have undermined its power to signify and activate political or ideological action is countered by Larson and Lizardo’s (2007) conclusion that “it is by no means clear that Che Guevara has been de-politicized in the face of unbridled commercialism …” (429). The reality is far more complex, as artists have shown through their adoption and appropriation of this image that commodifying forces and processes of radicalization can coexist: “In fact, the collective consumption of material culture objects might be associated with a renewed radicalization of political struggles and a strengthening of collective identities and ideological commitments” (Larson and Lizardo 2007, 449). As a result of their extensive work Larson and Lizardo (2007) advise us to consider that the material consumption of Che Guevara’s image can actually coexist with commitments to political resistance and, despite the ominous intonations of mass media scholars, “commoditization does not result in the irrevocable termination of the power of political images and symbols” (450). Branding attempts to insert stories between us and objects in a way that fosters desire of the objects in order to participate in a specific story. In this way, branding is geared to interrupt our own processes of singularization (Kopytoff 1986) so that a more homogenous story can become a source of profit. These shallow “brand sagas” (Twitchell 2004, 489) are discussed by James Twitchell in Brand Nation in looking at the commercial strategies adopted by museums, universities, and churches and so on as if to prove everything is a brand (Casey 2009, 306). Twitchell (2004, 488–9) notes,
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Transient materialism. Secular epiphany. Yes, brand owners talk about the soul of their brands, brand aura, and of their brands as icons, to be sure. By this they mean that their brands have a symbolic, almost a religious significance, which goes way beyond their worth as products.
These discourses of “brand soul” and “brand icon” (488) and the “process of spiritualizing commercial brands” (488) are supported by Douglas Atkin, in The Culting of Brands as a way for brand owners to copy churches and cults in turning their brands into some kind of source of community in order to promote goodwill and broaden the meaning of branding to make it all-encompassing of any symbolic representation under which people can group together (Casey 2009, 306). To some extent this strategy succeeds. “How else to explain something so irrational as Evian water, a Dior purse, or a Martha Stewart rolling pin?” (Twitchell 2004, 488). Nevertheless, this tactic does not succeed in all cases, particularly in such politically charged and contested cases such as that of the Guerrillero Heroico. While the “intrinsic logic of brand protection” follows the notion that the brand’s intangibility makes “brand owners worry about the fragility of their vital piece of property,” since its value can vanish overnight if it is somehow given a bad reputation. Casey (2009) believes the Korda estate lawyers are doing something similar since they are demarcating acceptable and non-acceptable usage of the image (335). In spite of this, it is likely that the usage of the Guerrillero Heroico as governed by the Cuban government, Guevara’s family, and Korda’s daughter Diana Díaz represents an awareness of and compatibility with the meaning of Guevara’s own death and life. Just as there was a perfect emotional correspondence between Guevara’s death as a result of his attempt to change the world because “anything less would have meant that he found the ‘intolerable’ tolerable” (Berger 1975, 207). For John Berger (1975), Guevara “represented a decision, a conclusion” (207). In a letter to his parents when he left Cuba, Guevara wrote: “Now a willpower that I have polished with an artist’s attention will support my feeble legs and tired-out lungs. I will make it” [Guevara 113, (translation by Berger)] (208). Certain of his own death in the fight against imperialism, Guevara called for those who would embrace the same ideals to welcome death as long as “our battle-cry, may have reached some receptive ear and another hand may be extended to wield our weapons …” [1a ‘Vietnam Must Not Stand Alone,’ New Left Review, No. 43, 1967, London.] (Berger 1975, 204). Responding to his call, millions interpellated by the Guerrillero Heroico around the world take up the
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image as a way of noting the intolerable state of the world, the need to change it, and the commitment (to varying degrees) to participate in that change. To those who re-render this image on the streets (in the vernacular hand-made sense such as that of a graffiti artist on the street in Guatemala), attempts to brand products with this image of Che fail absolutely and its copyrighting is irrelevant. Thus, the image continues to function as a virtual prosthetic of the man himself, and of his ideas. Both continue to be politically charged and salient.
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3
Virtual Resurrections: Che Guevara’s Image as Place of Hope
In 2006, while reading news on the Internet, I came across an image of Hindu women demonstrating in the streets of Tamil Nadu, Chennai. The special correspondent describes the crowd and its demographic composition under the banner “Expressing Solidarity” and reports on the reasons they have publicly gathered to protest. The caption under the photograph reads, “Student activists from Assam taking part in the procession to mark the beginning of the national conference of the AISF (All-India Students’ Federation) in Chennai on Tuesday.” I read on in an effort to better comprehend this image: They came from Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, Orissa, West Bengal and different parts of Tamil Nadu. And they marched along Anna Salai and Wallajah Road on Tuesday in traditional costumes, raising slogans in different languages. But the young girls and boys, who participated in the procession to mark the beginning of the 26th national conference of the All-India Students Federation (AISF), had a common mission: oppose “all attempts to commercialise or communalise education.” (Anonymous, “26th AISF national conference begins.” 2006, online)
Questions boomeranging in my head, I peered at the image and hunted through the text while conscious that I was not exempt from what Jacques Rancière tells us when he writes, “looking is also an action that confirms or modifies … ‘interpreting’ the world is already a means of transforming it” (1992, 277): each time we witness we know something, when we try to think of what that might be we are transforming it by interpreting it. Confirmation that I was seeing what I thought I was seeing came in the form of the correspondent’s descriptive note: “The activists, carrying AISF flags and portraits of Che Guevara and freedom fighters Bhagat Singh, P. Jeevanantham and K. Baladhandayutham, raised
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slogans … [and] called for effective measures to stop collection of capitation fee in schools and colleges” (The Hindu, 2006, online source, my emphasis). Odd but true, in ancient Tamil territory, Southern India, near the Bay of Bengal, it is Che Guevara’s posterized face (multiple copies) born aloft by sari-clad women. I cannot discern other “freedom fighters” in the photograph and it really looks like Che alone is accompanying these protesters. The textual confirmation serves only to make the image that much more bizarre: why Che and not Gandhi or someone local, or perhaps a more relevant figure? Why here and what is the link with India or any issue in Hindu education? The sight of Che’s posterized face in this photograph was like an inexplicable anomaly, compelling my disoriented eyes to contemplate it. This image has not only appeared in Chennai: in countless situations and places around the world, Cuban photographer Alberto Korda’s iconic face of Che Guevara is an image which goes beyond t-shirts, key chains, and other knick-knacks, beyond being a brand appropriated by one or another movement, and beyond being a symbol of some type of rebellion. The demonstrators in figure 3.1 have a dream not just for themselves, but for a better education for their community: it is a hope in the sense that it is not a case of “us” or “them” but “we.” My wonderings about this and other such experiences, led me to a phenomenological approach. Phenomenology enables me to
Figure 3.1: Photo: R. Shivaji Rao in “26th AISF national conference begins.” The Hindu: Online edition of India’s National Newspaper (Wednesday, January 4, 2006)
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conjecture why this image accompanies the people in the photograph. Why here? Why now?1 How is it being experienced? In the spirit of Gabriel Marcel’s method of concrete description and personal invocation, I adopt an approach or “methodology that has been called d’après Heidegger, ontological-phenomenology” (Grady 1970, 56). While mindful that particular lived-experience anecdotes may provide reflective understandings of phenomenological topics, they are studied “as a concrete example of a possible phenomenological topic” (van Manen 2008, personal communication). Thus, this process is not methodologically objective; rather it is open at every turn through “heuristic attentiveness, creative insight, interpretive sensibility, and scholarly preparedness” (van Manen 2008, personal communication). Florensky writes (1996, 65): Thus a window is a window because a region of light opens out beyond it; hence, the window giving this light is not itself ‘like’ the light, nor is it subjectively linked in our imagination with our ideas of light—but the window is that very light itself, in its ontological self-identity, that very light which, undivided-initself and thus inseparable from the sun. But the window all by itself —i.e., apart from its relationship to the light, beyond its function as carrier of light—is no longer a window but dead wood and mere glass.
Here he is warning us that, ontologically, windows are not like the light but rather are inseparable from it—as inseparable as light is from the sun in our experience. Without light no window really exists, just wood and glass. Like windows, we can conceive of images as structural possibilities, although they are not limited to that alone. Without the viewer looking, it is not an image, just paint or pixels on a surface. So how can we know when an image is imaging? Roland Barthes offers us the concepts of the studium and punctum. Although Barthes is generally regarded as a Structuralist, in Camera Lucida he provides notions that are more fluid and transitive in that they exist in a relation and move back and forth without being synthesized. The studium, for example, functions to inform, to represent, to cause to signify, to provoke desire. In contrast, the punctum is of the order not of form but intensity—not the “detail” but “time.” It is uncoded, and unnameable, it acts. The punctum speaks more to the limits and contradictions missed when we assume visual representation is made up of legible signs that scholarly systems can classify. When people describe their experiences of this image of Che Guevara we can ask if they felt a punctum. Did the image act; was it imaging with/for them, as wood and glass become a window when the light shines through?2
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In the following experiential account, a Lebanese student is “stopped dead” when she encounters a graffito version of the Korda photograph. The anecdote was a response to a widely distributed request for experiential accounts about confronting the image of Che. Abbey3 describes her experience of this image transfiguring the “apartheid” wall in Palestine: When I saw the image on the walls that enclose Ramallah and Bethlehem I was stopped dead in my tracks. I mean I’d already seen it on key rings and t-shirts in the markets, but this was different. Bigger than life and almost bigger than the wall—looking out at a future—a possibility—over the wall and beyond the occupation. At least that is what it felt like to me. And this image, offering solidarity—not just his own—but reminding Palestinians living under military occupation that they are not alone in either their suffering or their resistance. Reminding Palestinians imprisoned behind those walls that there are people beyond who are working and struggling in solidarity— reminding them that there is a global structure that is oppressing them, that this is not a tribal war but a war that feeds on patriarchy and capitalism. That there are millions who are imprisoned behind walls. The wall is an oppression and is guarded and watched all the time. To manage to get an image on the wall is, in itself, an act of subversion and resistance. His image there speaks to the meaning embedded in that iconic gaze, and face. (Abbey)
Does the image (figure 3.2) somehow displace or dissolve a wall built to divide, demarcate, and decide territorial boundaries in Abbey’s eyes? She was able to see beyond the wall, not physically but temporally. The coordinates of the place have been revised; no longer is the painted area simply part of the wall. It reconfigures that physical place as well as the lived experience of the beholder. Recognizing its very presence as transgressive, she wonders how an image like that came to be painted on the ever-watched wall. This is the aspect that grabs hold of her: that strikes her. On this wall that seems to never end and reaches forbidding heights, the image seems to override rather than be overwhelmed. Its presence demonstrates that, though watched, the artists created their graffiti unseen. Just as the vision through a window can be larger than the wall in which it is embedded, her sense of solidarity, and the possibilities of resistance seem to “outsize” the oppression. Does the image bring those “beyond” into contact with those others, trapped behind the wall? Does it act as a “reminder” making present those invisible allies, and reinforcements who seem to be at hand? If the image transforms that which is empirically already there with an almost alchemical “as-if-ness,” it is not because of some projection of political allies but rather for the unseen act of imagining an other
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Figure 3.2: “West Bank barrier Che Guevara” (available at: Wikimedia Commons. Original source: www.heyche.com by permission of the webmaster: no longer online)
future. Abbey expresses the hope of seeing a barrier become a bridge through the image. Viewing the image not only brings about the effect of displacing the wall but also helps Abbey relocate herself in relation to that place, and become
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other than who/what she was. Martin Heidegger tells us the phainomenon is that which shows itself, and through logos “that” is made manifest, so with the aim of letting “that which shows itself be seen from itself in the very way in which it shows itself from itself ” (1962, 58). But that which shows itself can also hide itself and it can be dynamic, flickering between visibility and invisibility, transparency and opacity, legibility and indecipherability. This goes to the very nature of the image as such. Philosopher Jean-Luc Nancy coincides when he writes: “the image is a thing that is not a thing; it distinguishes itself from it, essentially” (2005, 2). As in Abbey’s account, her experience of the image actively altered her sense of time and space as she lived it. The wall was made present and at the same time withdrawn by the image in the moment of her being “stopped dead” in her tracks. The metaphorical figure of being “stopped dead” hints at how dangerous it is for her to imagine the future. Was she the walking dead in that place under the shadow of the wall, until Che stood in for the future? In that moment the image brought with it another dimension, it became the thing that is not a thing. In both places, Chennai and Ramallah, the image of Che Guevara’s face had more than informational value. It also had agency in the sense that it was not merely the communication of a thing that can be known, the portrait of an Argentine-Cuban revolutionary (Che-studium), it is a thing that makes things happen or at least somehow anchors a hope that something, a change, will happen (or “Che”- punctum). At this point some questions arise regarding the nature of this hope that seems to translate to any language, time, or place, and the quality of its relationship to this image. At the same time, although we have witnessed the forceful impact of the image of Che’s face on the mural in Ramallah, and there are many such examples, we cannot ignore one of the most ubiquitous mediums for presenting this image, the humble t-shirt. Does the visual effect when we see someone wearing a Che shirt parallel what we have heard thus far? When we see someone wearing a Che shirt, is it a sign of hope or merely desire? What is the difference?
How is hope experienced? When a couple finally buys the house they have been saving their money for; when a professional gets the promotion she had been working toward; when people achieve significant successes in their lives; as soon as these “hopes” are satisfied, we realize they were not much more than desires or lesser hopes.
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Benedict XVI gives us a more nuanced understanding of hope than the standard dictionary definition of an expectation or wish, by helping us distinguish between lesser hopes and greater hopes. Though these lesser hopes can keep us going, they are not enough. Once satisfied they reveal themselves as meager and misplaced and failing thus to qualify as true hope being rather, “hope for myself alone, which is not true hope since it forgets and overlooks others” (Benedict XVI 2007, 284). In Gabriel Marcel’s comprehensive and rich doctrine of hope published in Homo Viator, he takes great care to distinguish between hope and desire. Joseph Godfrey explains, “Marcel insists that to hope is not to desire: desiring is essentially insistent, fixated and covetous or self-centered, while hoping is none of these” (1987, 235). He adds, it is not that all wanting is like this, but there is a difference in the “quality of the wanting” (1987, 236). With Marcel then, I take one of hope’s definitions to be: … essentially the availability [disponibilité] of a soul which has entered [engagée] intimately enough into the experience of communion to accomplish in the teeth of will and knowledge [á l’opposition du vouloir et du connaître] the transcendent act – the act establishing the vital regeneration [par lequel elle affirm la pérennité vivante] of which this experience affords both the pledge and the first fruits. (Marcel 1962, 67, in Godfrey 1987, 235)
Vital to this understanding of hope is recognizing its essence as both act and attitude. In other words, hope is performative in that taking the attitude of opening one’s soul to the “experience” is also at the same time an opening to that experience. And it is not just any experience but one of “communion” that is in unity or close relationship with others. Hope is necessarily social. Thus Marcel emphasizes “the difference between essentially material results and those that engender true human community” (Godfrey 1987, 236). Hope invites our participation in the experience of this communion that, while including human others and human community, is conceived of much more broadly. Marcel’s conception of the “intersubjective” dynamic of hope is core. To elaborate on the concept, Godfrey draws on Martin Buber’s doctrine of the I-Thou as a complementary parallel to Marcel’s work to reveal these intersubjective relationships extend to nature, texts, artworks, and other things. Although the absolute hope, for Marcel claims “beyond all data, beyond all inventories and calculations, a mysterious principle which is in connivance with me …” (Godfrey 1987, 238), it does not dissolve in abstraction, instead it is always empirically mediated. Thus “A person does not hope in God
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Figure 3.3: (Tehuacan, Mexico and Marcos/source Indymedia)
without some relation to something experiential” (Godfrey 1987, 238–9). So the question remains, what are the vehicles opening experiences by which we can be called to participate in hope?
Representing hope Anchors are the most ancient symbols for hope and were used by the early Christians to signify the cross in disguise, thus elevating the safety represented therein to an image of eternal salvation. Yet long before this use of the anchor-as-cross, the anchor was seen as a sailor’s last chance to steady his vessel in a deadly storm, intimately connecting it to the notion of hope. In the Biblical Epistle to the Hebrews, the writer describes “Hope” set before us “as an anchor of the soul, sure and firm” (Heb. 6.19–20, New International Version).
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Figure 3.4: Mural Belfast, Ireland 2009 (Photo credit Anna McClean)
Metaphorically hope is a ground. It is the particular ground we need in times of overwhelming struggle or when in danger of despair. Opposing conventional ways of taking hope as something that can be aimed, “Hope has a target,” (Godfrey 1987, 239) Marcel’s analysis coincides with early understandings that “hope is precisely the holding off from despair when I’m
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sorely tempted to say: All is lost. Hope is ‘the act by which this temptation [to despair] is actively or victoriously overcome’ ” (Godfrey 1987, 239). It is no surprise that places where people endure the direst conditions are also the places where the most resolute hope actively and visibly manifests itself. Thus we find hope in Pandora’s box with all the evils and wherever there is a temptation to despair. Returning to Marcel, hope unites the human being, not to the world in general, which would mean nothing, but to a certain determinate ambiance which is as concrete as a cocoon or a nest. [Thus the] linkage is determinate, concrete to the point of being nest-like, conferring a sense of at-home and nurturing … . (Godfrey 1987, 238)
Using the localized image of an intimate home, a point of safety and trust, prompts Godfrey to write: “This seems a very fruitful way of imagining the strong hoping of finite people in finite situations, without requiring some sort of idolizing or absolutizing of the finite term of hope” (Godfrey 1987, 239). Building on these understandings of hope we can turn back to the image of Che and wonder: if we can hope in the anchor for stability in the storm, does the action of this image resemble a kind of phenomenological anchor in a storm? Can this image function as a vehicle, or refuge, enabling that transcendent act of defying will and knowledge in opening one’s self in hope?
Hope vs. Desire: Just another t-shirt? The Che phenomenon is challenging because its role in popular culture in terms of differentiating between its appearance as a form of “designer rebellion”5 on the t-shirts of youth and tourist key chains for example, coexists with its ability to act as an anchor of hope as in Abbey’s case and the image from Chennai. While recognizing the number of arguments on both sides of the problematic nature of the status of Che’s image, Gabriel Marcel and Roland Barthes’ frameworks help engage the debate between those who hold that it is an either/or. Let’s examine the following anecdotes related by three different people: When I was in high-school, my observational skills could not help but notice this image everywhere. Already developing an obsession with t-shirt designs, I had to hunt one down for my wearable collection. A family visit to T— finally gave me this opportunity. (Anna)
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An almost immediate response in the impulse to “collect” a t-shirt with this “design” on it leads to a “hunt.” From what we have understood through Marcel’s distinctions between hope and desire, we can see there is desire in this case to possess one of these shirts. But Anna’s “obsession with t-shirt designs,” made her feel she “had” to have this one. In a sense it was essential to the collection creating a more intense wanting, a need. Why is it such an essential item to include in the collection? The image makes me think about high-school, when I just moved to Canada. A lot of teenagers seem to like wearing t-shirts with the simplified silkscreened photo of Che. Not that I’ve never seen this photo, it’s just that where I come from it’s not that fashionable. (Julia)
Julia is relocated to another time and place when she looks at the image. She attributes the popularity of the t-shirt to fashion and it becomes a marker for her of the difference between Canadian society and her original society as well as signifying youth. It stands out for her as difference and she is highly aware of its presence and yet it is significantly powerless, almost uninteresting. When I see/saw Che on the t-shirts in Ramallah and Jerusalem I chuckled and passed by—went on looking for Za’atar and olives. The t-shirt Che is just a marketing tool—it doesn’t elicit any thoughts of resistance or activism. It’s just a t-shirt with an image. (Abbey)
Again, the image on the t-shirt calls one’s attention to it. In this case Abbey, who had been so impacted by seeing the image on the “Apartheid” wall, is prompted to chuckle and shrug off the image because “it’s just a t-shirt.” As a shirt then it does not have the punctum it had for her when it was on the separation wall. It is therefore easy to disregard. The ubiquitous presence of the image of Che Guevara as a two-tone print on t-shirts has made it a cultural phenomenon. Frequently it is associated with the color red, but all colors and sizes of shirts carry this reproduction of Che’s face. Most often it is accompanied by slogans such as, “Hasta la victoria siempre,” or “patria o muerte,” or even the slogans of bands such as Rage Against the Machine. Generally these slogans indicate rebellion, violence, or resistance against the institutionalized dominant order. The image is more widely known than the history of the man. It has become a popular culture icon, and yet calling it either an icon or a symbol does not satisfy it. In fact, Cuban exiles who call him a mass murderer, and speak against Guevara’s philosophies and policies, and Leftists who imitate Che or use him as an example, as well as
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Figure 3.5: Spain protest: Indymedia/copyleft
politicians such as Hugo Chavez, and Evo Morales all refer to the same image. Both sides argue against the fashion-centered uses of the image, insisting there is more to it (though for different reasons). Yet, as we have seen, this alone is not enough to endow the image with punctum although the possibility of its transfiguration haunts it constantly. In this sense, Ariel Dorfman is able to look at the t-shirt and say, “Deep inside that T-shirt where we have tried to trap him, the eyes of Che are still burning with impatience” (2007, 1). Exceeding their medium; the eyes punch through the t-shirt from elsewhere. Possibly there is an expectation of something to come: “Just a sense of determination and focus” (Michael). The gaze sometimes described as defiant, sometimes as pensive, leaves us feeling that there is a future anticipated. When people are asked about the image, they most often speak of rebellion, even if they are not familiar with the historical figure of Che Guevara himself. Words like intense/passionate, bravery, inspired, determination/defiance, Cuba, sight into the future, group and belonging, and confidence often come up. “Che was all about change” (David).
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Many people wear these t-shirts and carry memorabilia but it is often disconnected from memory. Do they understand or share his cause, or are they romanticizing the idea of revolution? There seems to be a great deal of debate, at least in North America, around the person, as well as the image. No matter the degree of visual abstraction, the image in figure 3.5 still seems to have the ability to attract or arrest so many viewers. Barthes would say it is “without a code,” but it might be more fruitful to think of it as a code that devours any medium. Although we immediately decipher posture, such as rebellion, or sociopolitical context such as 1960s Cuban revolution, or what Barthes would refer to as the studium: often there is still something there we cannot name. Barthes (1981, 53) writes: What I cannot name cannot really prick me. The incapacity to name is a good symptom of disturbance … [it] holds me, though I cannot say why, i.e., say where: is it the eyes, the skin … The effect is certain but unlocatable, it does not find its sign, its name; it is sharp and yet lands in a vague zone of myself; it is acute yet muffled, it cries out in silence. Odd contradiction: a floating flash.
This acute yet muffled paradoxical floating flash, or punctum performs. The following anecdote illuminates the punctum’s operation by reflecting on a common reaction to buying the t-shirt.
Figure 3.6: Athens, Greece
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Walking home from the pub, my eyes are caught by a mannequin in the window. Not unusual for this street designed to sell, the central hub of the latest trends, but unusual for me. Though in my years living here, out of self-preservation I have developed the ability of letting my eyes slide over the windows without seeing what lays beyond them. So today is different, my eyes slide right through the window, unusually drawn to this figure and the shirt she wears. It is red, silk-screened with the face of Che Guevara. I instantly recognize the face. The moment I see it I want it. I want that shirt. I think of going in, trying it on, buying it—But no!—I stop myself. I don’t want that shirt, I tell myself, though my desire for it still flutters in my chest. I don’t want that shirt. Think about it, my brain argues. I’m saddened, no, I suppose I don’t want it. My desire gives its last few futile flutters and lays still, now heavy in my chest. This all, in the minute it takes me to walk past the store. (Ed)
The inner tug-of-war Ed experienced in that moment of passing the shop window seems like a manifestation of the innate ability he had to differentiate between hope and desire. The wanting was there, but resistance was stronger. Like Barthes, he cannot immediately name his disturbance, we do not know why he resisted buying the shirt, but we do know his eyes were “unusually drawn” to the shirt with its image. Perhaps this experience gestures toward the punctum of this image for Ed because his eyes were simply unable to slide over that particular window. He had another experience: Wandering through the streets of Venice, I am annoyed. The Biennale is on and the artists have taken over the city. Entire blocks are excluded to normal foot-traffic (unless you pay to see the exhibits) and the canals prevent jay-walking to one’s destination. I am lost somewhere in the back alleys, trying to find my way back to something recognizable. The walls around me are high, old, growing moss, and periodically revealing a residence behind them. I see ahead of me a poster pasted on the alley wall, and, by sheer dint of there being nothing else to look at, my eyes are drawn to it. As I approach, I make out a recognizable face, a black and white photo, with text above and below. As I get closer, the face isn’t quite as recognizable as I thought. No, something is definitely off. It is not the face I know, but an imitation of it. An identical imitation, if there can be any such thing. My eyes scan the text for some clue—Italian, which I don’t read, but I can fathom the poster’s purpose. An exhibit, by the woman who has put herself in Che’s place. I am angered by the artist, by her nerve. Spitefully, however, I think “she’s behind the times. That’s been done. She’ll never win.” (Ed)
The replacing of the original facial features with those of the artist angers Ed, he is jolted and disappointed. Although he assesses and processes information from the
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poster, the studium, he still experiences something powerful from the absence of the face he expected (it is there evoked in him by its deferral by an imitation, but it is not concretely there). The comment “No, something is definitely off ” alerts us to the existence of the punctum. Although the original face is not concretely there, it is still virtually acting. Paradoxically, acting becomes other than being. From Elvis to Madonna, and even George Bush, almost every face imaginable has been substituted in to the frame provided by the silhouette of Che Guevara’s long hair and starred beret. Is it a kind of invasion of a territory, an assumption of a shared space, provoking indignation in those who might feel that place is not to be shared. For Bachelard, looking and knowing are not separated but the knowing of looking is of an altogether different order: “… to specify that the image comes before thought, we should have to say that poetry [or the visual image] rather than being a phenomenology of the mind, is a phenomenology of the soul” (Bachelard 1964, xix–xx).
Where is the “here” of the image? Deleuze and Guattari’s notion of territory is described by Grossberg as “a consolidation across contexts, a holding together of heterogeneity by the expression of a rhythm among the elements” (Grossberg 1997, 20). It helps us describe what is happening when someone locates or is relocated by looking at any rendering of Che Guevara’ s face taken from the matrix photograph however indirectly. The dynamic mode of existence that Deleuze and Guattari call territory can be imagined as a moment where all the lines of context converge—from the medium (t-shirt or other) the image is rendered onto, to what an individual is thinking in the moment of detecting the image, to the colors and shapes, and how they strike that particular eye in that particular sighting, and any other thing that contributes the rhythm or “refrain”—allowing the “expression” of that rhythm to open up an inside of an outside and an outside of an inside of that experience; “a way of constantly holding back and opening up to the chaos, which is never only chaotic” (Grossberg 1997, 20). In this regard the experiences can be seen as places (“you had to be there”) that are neither geocentric nor anthropocentric. Thus, they are free to be mobile and intersubjective and open any passages and conduits matching the rhythm of expression. For example, when Turkish singer/songwriter Sezen Aksu (2005) sings, “Acinin yuzolcumu yeryuzunden cokmus aslinda” or, “The surface area of pain is (actually) greater than the surface area of the Earth,” she reveals this kind of deterritorialization. Although we are bound to the Earth and have an innate sense of “territoriality,”
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we are called to recognize and tap our universal and boundless extra-territorial dimensions (dreams, hopes, and emotions). Consequently, to be able to respond appropriately to affective phenomena, we require philosophically deterritorialized ways of thinking with all their complexity and ambiguity.
Figure 3.7: School mural in Gonzales Catán, Buenos Aires, Argentina. (Photo credit: C. Cambre)
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The dynamic of the construction of place if we look at it in this way, has a great affinity for how places of hope do their “becoming.” However, we need to differentiate how the place of hope is experienced differently: it “folds out of revelations of renewal in our being … at once a return to our authentic being as existence (standing-out radiating) and the burgeoning of uniqueness” (Grady 1970, 61). Or in Marcel’s words “as before, but differently and better than before” (Grady 1970, 61): revived, resurrected, and yet transfigured. Fittingly, this particular image authorizes a link to a similar rhythm when given the possibility of expression. In other words, the anchor does not become a place of hope until there is a terrifying storm just as the face of “Che” does not become a place of hope until contexts converge. This is the link Marcel talks about whereby we are always already involved in every act of hope. The force of the convergence creating this experiential anchor or territory of hope can be life-altering as this next account vividly depicts. My first encounter with Che took place in the aftermath of a bloody student confrontation with the police at the University of Nairobi. Some protest leaders had used some Che portraits in the protest and this had greatly incensed the government. One of my friends on campus had smuggled a Che portrait into his room and he was so proud showing it to us behind closed doors: a huge risk. I mean associating with Che meant days and nights in a police dungeon; people perceived as having ‘Marxist/revolutionary’ leanings were routinely tortured in Kenya in the 80s. Having a portrait of Che would be considered sufficient association to warrant a visit to the dungeons. I remember vaguely admiring the man, Che. How could a portrait be so powerful, how could it make a government run scared? But I guess I feared Che more than I admired him. Knowing him could mean the end of my university education, and possible detention. The fear pervading the country, then, was that bad. I have hardly ‘interacted’ with Che since, but any mention, or even the sight of his portrait reminds me of those dark oppressive days in Kenya. I think Che was part of the oppression. Che was a household name, in the list of banned personalities. (Paul)
The fear Paul experienced, resulting in part from his knowledge of the likely government reaction to finding the image of “Che” in a student bedroom, testifies to the hope of those who were willing to risk “a visit to the dungeons” as well as to the government’s phobic relationship, “running scared” with it. Through the alchemy of the image, a bedroom becomes a lair of resistance. An image that permits and incites police brutality against students transfigures a place of learning into a place of punishment; encouragement into reprimand. Paul remembers those days as dark ones, his fear linking Che’s image to them irretrievably.
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Figure 3.8: New York City Mural: Indymedia/copyleft
A thread connects the life of the man represented in the image in figure 3.6 to its presence in the minds of students, but for Paul’s testimony it accrues the additional history of being an image that did not ward off oppression but rather brought it on. Those accepting the likely possibility of detention, torture, and an end to their lives as they know them understand the risk, perhaps the hope they hold out is seen as something greater than their own individual lives. Or they may be engaging the fearful aspects of resistance that are usually left unsaid; that death is as likely an outcome as victory. An image takes the shape of the hope it is invested with through a process of inter-animation. We animate the image, and in turn it animates us, renewing our vision as we look.
The historical image of Che To understand how this image is always becoming an anchor for diverse people globally, it is important to reflect on its sheer status and popularity as well as some of the reactions evoked by it. It is almost always the same face gazing, unsatisfied from flags, banners, murals, posters, and t-shirts. All the usual features, eyes, ears, nose, and mouth appear depicting a man’s face, Caucasian, 32 or 33 years old, in two tones. It is devoid of background, a clear cloudless sky behind the figure is
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virtually blank: nothing special about this empty space. These endless repetitions of Guevara’s face, sometimes printed and at times hand drawn are the progeny of the original photograph whose publication rocked the world of photography like an explosion, as its author once observed. Somehow it became the most reproduced photograph in the world. Is it simply a matter of the subject, the man himself? Yet he appears in countless other photos unremarked. What is so special about the moment of looking at this image, and being seen by it? The rough roguish unkempt hair and beard, a Robin Hood-esque tilted cap, eyes gazing up and into the distance, suggestive, and simultaneously expressive. We are constantly bombarded with images of aesthetically beckoning evocative faces and yet this one stands out. Some say it is famous because of the timing of its publication: it appeared just as he himself disappeared—a mysterious kind of aura clings to it. Perhaps this image, this face, is not just there, but is actively showing itself, calling the viewer to confront it, to respond, to see otherwise. And viewers do respond: The star. It shines so bright in the sky and so does he, he stands out from the crowd; he’s so different. His hair, so long, experienced and gone through many struggles and life threatening events just like his soul, his body, his life. His eyes, sees everything, happiness, sadness around the world and tries to change it on some form of way. His nose smelt [sic] all different kinds of dirt, the smell of death, the smell of victory, the smell of change. His voice, persuaded many people, changed many lives with the interaction and his presence. The voice of many people. His face, everyone knows it’s just you which describes it. (John)
And: Revolution, romance, rugged lifestyle, protest, “fighting the man,” erotic feeling. Makes me tingle, feel fierce, and it makes me feel powerful. I think that’s what makes me tingle. Makes me nervous/uncomfortable. (Natasha)
John and Natasha have textured, affective experiences of this image. Ernesto Guevara was an individual who lived a unique and brief historical moment and yet the face is one that “everyone knows.” A presence that causes tingling, is energizing and gives discomfort, and yet a “star” to be followed. Many people feel the reverberations and respond to this portrait of Che Guevara. It repeatedly emerges in the midst of social protests and demonstrations and gazes out from placards and banners. Masked participants protecting their identities make Guevara’s image more conspicuous through the contrast. The visual outcome is, in effect, a face for the faceless.
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Figure 3.9: Barcelona: Indymedia/copyleft
The phenomenon does not pass unobserved and poets, songwriters, and novelists attempt to capture it. Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano poetically writes of Che as “el nacedor” which translates roughly to “the one who tends to be born” or “the one that keeps being born.” In the poem he asks why it is that Che has this dangerous habit of repeatedly being born. Perversely the more he is insulted, manipulated, betrayed, the more he keeps being born through the image—a movement remarkably like that of hope itself. “In fact, we could characterize the essence of hope as ‘the very movement by which it challenges the evidence upon which men claim to challenge it itself ” (Grady 1970, 60). On another occasion, Galeano comments that Che is resurrected in each one that believes in what Guevara believed in, and is resurrected in the great popular liberation movements of these lands that were not condemned by any gods to the disgrace that they endure. Rebirth and hope are intimately linked.
Theorizing the image: The punctum and access to the virtual Didi-Huberman (2005) points out that the “relation of the soul to the world of the eye” is none other than the not-synthesis of an instance that is itself torn between consciousness and unconsciousness, and of a world that coheres only
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Figure 3.10: Brussels 2004: Indymedia copyleft (http://archive.indymedia.be/ uploads/-chenge-.jpg)
up to a point. So the structure is open in the sense that it will be breached at its center—and in the eyes of the beholder it is ignescent, capable of bursting into flame. Just as an actor’s performance achieves it is best result from the “polarity of the opposition between the mental representation evoked by the text and the action performed by the actors—it’s all about that disparity the gap, that is where it all happens, it is one of the underlying bases … the opposition is a basic prerequisite—synthesized in the spectator’s act of interpretation which transforms both the representation and the reality in a flash of emotionally charged ‘seeing’ ” (Honzl 1976, 88). In the original photograph, Che’s gaze does not engage us, we are positioned below, and he is unaware and lost in thought. Raw documentary feel transmits in black and white, but also in the seriousness, and un-posed quality of the figure. In discussing such “fugitive testimony” in the case of photography, Barthes (1981, 93) elaborates on studium and punctum writing, “It is not possible to posit a rule of connection between the studium and the punctum (when it happens to be there). It is a matter of co-presence” (42). Che, the historical personage, is the studium. But simultaneously the image has become something else, more than just a rendering of a man, not Che but a punctum we might also recognize as the
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talismanic “Che.” Mireya Castañeda writes: “The photo is converted into myth … revealed in his look is the super-concentrated rage for those deaths, there is an impactful force/strength in his expression” (1997, para. 3, my translation). Is that it? Is concentrated rage over injustice the punctum that makes this photographic image immortal, and uncrushable by the fetishistic commodity sphere selling “designer rebellion?” It can somehow transmit an elusive essence regardless of the varying media sporting the image. For Barthes, “the Photograph sometimes makes appear what we never see in a real face” (1981, 103). It is what Georges Didi-Huberman termed visual. Where the visible is all that is seen on the surface of the image, the visual is all those things seen but not apparent such as the “mother’s eyes” in the daughter, or whatever the viewer brings, but it also includes indexical features. For example, hair blowing would be the visible indication of wind, which would then be the visual element. However, the alchemy of the photograph of Che Guevara is not just that it is visible, or visual, it also provides a space for the Barthesian punctum to act, or in Didi-Huberman’s terminology, the virtual. Didi-Huberman (2005, 18–19) writes: The word virtual is meant to suggest how the regime of the visual tends to loosen our grip on the “normal” (let’s say rather: habitually adopted) conditions of visible knowledge … The event of virtus, that which is in power, that which is power, never gives a direction of the eye to follow, or a univocal sense of reading… . it is irrefutable and simple as event; it is situated at the junction of a proliferation of possible meanings, whence it draws its necessity, which it condenses, displaces, and transfigures.
This image provokes, holds a possible future, an almost-legible-yet-escapingexpression sense of a frontier or horizon that presents itself and yet withdraws in the sheer rawness of the image despite, or rather precisely because, it is de-linked from the actual human being whose figure once deflected light onto the film. Although the Bolivian miner has only a small sticker on his helmet, the original is invoked, and the image is no less effective as an amulet; a much hoped for protection in the lethal context of the Bolivian mine.
The likeness: A face in time John Berger offers the notion of “the likeness” to provide perspectives for approaching some of the elusive elements of the experience of this image,
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while they fall short of explaining the unique impact of this specific photograph. We might accept that its experience is something perhaps out of reach of the merely explanatory and take what we can from what they offer. Berger believes the transcendent qualities manifested through, but not necessarily on, the human face are the key to the mystery of the Other both in art and in daily encounters. As Berger discusses photographs of people experiencing terror, pain, and grief, he observes “these moments are in reality utterly discontinuous with normal time.” Later, he reiterates, “such moments, whether photographed or not, are discontinuous with all other moments. They exist by themselves” (1980, 39). He recognizes first, that time can be interrupted by raw emotion, and second, that this ruptured moment can create a place in and through a photograph. Susan Sontag also defines the photograph as “a trace, something directly stenciled off the real, like a footprint or a death-mask’ ” (1980, 50). Digital photography and reproduction, far from doing away with this imprint of the subject, has actually absorbed it. The affective force, the feeling of witnessing, and that someone was there is still evoked, even with all the savvy photo editing techniques available, there is still a possibility of a Barthesian punctum. Berger aptly describes the media environment surrounding us as one where the volume of images, as in quantity and also as in noise, is unprecedented. In addition, many of these images are faces which “harangue ceaselessly by provoking envy, new appetites, ambition or, occasionally pity combined with a sense of impotence” (2001, 58). Not all of these faces represent the “likeness” of the person pictured; indeed the opposite is true. For Berger, a “likeness” is characterized more by the absence rather than the presence of a person and requires one to have somehow experienced the person herself before a “likeness” is possible. He explains (2001, 19): When a person dies they leave behind, for those who knew them, an emptiness, a space: the space has contours and is different for each person mourned. This space with its contours is the person’s likeness and is what the artist searches for when making a living portrait. A likeness is something left behind invisibly.
What does the eye perceive that the microscope cannot reveal? Berger would say, a “likeness.” He illustrates this concept by narrating his attempts to draw the face of a friend. He drew her face many times in her presence but was unsatisfied because he could not capture the aspect he sought. Later, he redrew the picture from memory and found the remembered face had the missing essentials: it was a “likeness.” Somehow, via memory, essences animating, giving life to a person’s
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face can be envisioned. Berger and Benjamin, use the metaphor of a broken jar, lovingly reassembled, thus becoming “both flawed and more precious” to compare to the “image of a loved place or a loved person when kept in the memory after separation” (Berger 2001, 59). The likeness cannot materialize without the artist and the emotions the memory of the Other serve to trigger in the artist, who then seeks to transmit them; to become a medium for this contour, or space, noticed but not understood. A “likeness” cannot exist independently of the interaction between one and the Other, the resonance or vibration occurring in the human relation makes the “likeness” possible. For Berger, the eyes of the viewer are essential, but the eyes cannot be looking in an indifferent way. In About Looking, Berger’s theory of the likeness is still undeveloped but its root can be detected when he writes, “A person loved is recognized not by attainments but by the verbs which can satisfy that person” and thus “their contour or shape is not a surface encountered but a horizon which borders” (1980, 130). A horizon (the idea of the horizon in me?) can be understood as something not visible, but visual, always receding, present and absent. Berger (2001, 258) ends The shape of a pocket with a reference to Alberto Korda’s photograph of Che: A likeness is a gift and remains unmistakable – even when hidden behind a mask. A likeness can be effaced. Today Che Guevara sells T-shirts, that’s all that’s left of his likeness. Are you sure? The face speaks. The manifestation of the face is already discourse. (Levinas 1979, 66)
In Davis’s Levinas: An introduction, we learn: “… the encounter is not an event that can be situated in time; it is rather a structural possibility that precedes and makes possible all subsequent experience” (1996, 45). It is a space, and it is the kind of space where hope’s manifestation is possible. For Berger, this time-transcendent element can be transmitted, but not tamed, in images of the Other. And for Barthes, the photograph itself is invisible yet provides a vehicle for the image, just as the physical face provides a mobile map, features, and contours, for emotional expression. In either case, the “epiphany” or “revelation” is located—not inside but between the Other and the Same. Or, as Levinas tells us, “the face of the other at each moment destroys and overflows the plastic image it leaves me” (Levinas 1979, 43, 50–1, in Davis 1996, 133).
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Figure 3.11: Protest rally London, England May 17, 2003: Indymedia
Although the face is present to our vision, at all times we see the “plastic” image, yet there is always more. In a parallel comment Derrida states, “the face is not in the world because it breaches and exceeds totality” (1978, 134). Faces are profoundly communicative, and we need no lessons in how to decipher the myriad expressions that can manifest themselves on such a mobile surface. The face’s expression is also key, as it “… expresses the expression itself, it always remains master of the meaning which it delivers. ‘Pure act’ in its way, it [il] refuses to be assigned an identity, cannot be reduced to what is already known, brings help to itself, … speaks” (Levinas 1979 in Davis, 1996 132). If the expression is present, communicating, and “acting,” the way Levinas believes, it can permit/authorize the emotionally charged “look” to penetrate
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Figure 3.12: Honduras: Indymedia
the medium of the picture. This is a new space. Yet the dependency on interanimation with the viewer also can facilitate commodification of the image, and consequently indifference. This possibility is continuously exploited by popular culture. Nevertheless, an enormous number of receptive viewers continue to be “arrested” by the image today. Overflowing its medium via the expression, the “Che” image is always beyond reach as Other. At the same time, the look on Guevara’s face turns the receptive viewer into Other. Since the expression of intense emotion can invoke a facial response, for example, we may grimace or frown when we see someone experiencing a tragic moment or we may smile when we see someone having a particularly joyful moment, we have the capacity to mirror what we see. This photo can turn us into Other because the expression recreates and dislocates.
Conclusion The “likeness” left behind by Ernesto Guevara is invisible but perceptible in the matrix photograph taken by Korda; or virtual but not visible. This photograph authorizes, for individuals who are inclined to the experience, the gift of Berger and Benjamin’s jar to reassemble for themselves, to renew the jar, so that
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it is the same as before, flawed but better. Thus the image, as jar, becomes an intersubjective place. Witnessing the image sanctions re-location: we can thus reassemble in and through it a more precious place, though imperfect, because the relationship now includes the viewer. The exceptional possibility offered by the matrix image of Che Guevara, is of an expression of a rhythm matching the dynamic of hope whose essence is movement challenging the ground upon which claims “to challenge it itself ” (Grady 1970, 60) are made. Whenever/wherever despair rears its head, hope is reborn, resurrected anew. Those who see hope in the image, are perceiving the light that makes a window happen.
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Revolution Within: Youth and the Face of Che Guevara in Venezuela
Caracas, Venezuela, is a city of stark contrasts and extreme inequality. Space is at a premium in this densely built city squeezed into a valley between two mountain ranges so that buildings rise higher and higher. Entire neighborhoods are vertical communities located in bloques, buildings unique to Caracas were designed in the late fifties specifically to house large numbers of the urban poor. By contrast, the middle classes live in a variety of condo-like securitized edificios. In this crowded and stratified context, and between the cracks of a nation divided and struggling in a battle of media and images, I began my fieldwork.1 In the ongoing image war, the role of one image in particular (and the subject of my research) drew me to a neighbourhood called the 23 de enero. The image, Alberto Korda’s photograph of Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara known as the Guerrillero Heroico, visually occupies a central place in the community (figure 4.1). After weeks of communications and negotiations, I met with the youth-led grassroots collective in charge of the 23 de enero, the Colectivo Alexis Gonzáles Vive Carajo (C.A.G.V.C.). With them, I had the opportunity to explore the significance and practice of this famous image for them. I found that the C.A.G.V.C. use and experience the image of Che Guevara in ways that creatively reconfigure spaces in a revolution within the socialist revolution trumpeted by Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez. My fieldwork informs the case study portion within a larger project about the Guerrillero Heroico. Despite typically being particularistic, descriptive, heuristic, and inductive, a case study “does not claim any particular methods for data collection or data analysis,” and is a methodology “interested in insight, discovery, and interpretation rather than hypothesis testing” (Merriam 1988, 10). Consequently, using this form allowed me to be open to important and
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Figure 4.1: Guerrillero Heroico (1960 cropped version)
unexpected interactions and events. I was also free to collect visual, oral, written, and artifactual data as needed. Philosophically, case study research is also well suited to fieldwork with social groups because it “assumes that there are multiple realities … that the world is not [solely] an objective thing out there but a function of personal interaction and perception” (Merriam 1988, 17). And this trait of the world’s dynamics as “a function of ” interaction and perception applies equally to the researcher mediating the research. When, then, does meaning arrive? We can say it is arriving when there is motion back and forth between the experience and doubt borne by the participants, by the researcher, and ultimately by the reader.
It began with a face Peter McLaren (2000) writes about a bus ride he took in Latin America where he felt a sudden impulse to greet a young man who was walking down the street wearing a Che t-shirt. He distinguishes his sense of connection with the t-shirt
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wearer as a link with all people with a common resolve to fight injustice and free the world from cruelty and injustice (xix). Across the globe, other people resonate in similar ways with the Guerrillero Heroico. It appears and reappears, sometimes as a two-tone picture, occasionally as a drawing, but always evoking, if not reproducing, the unforgettable expression on Che Guevara’s face. Many times the image is simply being exploited as designer revolutionary-ism for trendy popular consumption; however, it repeatedly emerges in the midst of social protests and demonstrations gazing out from placards and banners.2 On the streets, people claim to walk in the footsteps of Guevara and his face seems to function trans-temporally and trans-nationally as a reminder of the connection between struggles near and far. Latin American intellectuals observe that Guevarismo is present as a resistance to the established order in certain social movements (Löwy 1997, 2). In these contexts, just as much as in the 23 de enero, the meaning of the image is explicitly linked with Guevara’s ethical and political stance when people declare they will continue what he had begun. It surfaces in marches against N.A.T.O. in Istanbul, Bush in Berlin, privatization of education in Australia, for democratic rights in Sarajevo, and among illegal immigrants in the U.S.A. Although rebellion and resistance are common themes, it may be problematic to assume rebellion signifies the same thing to people regardless of time or place, or that perfect translation is possible. The moment of snapping the photograph was not in itself a rebellious one. On March 5, 1960, Che Guevara was unaware and photographer Alberto Diaz Gutierrez, later known as Korda, took the shot by chance: “This photograph is not the product of knowledge or technique. It was really coincidence, pure luck,” commented Korda (Sridhar 2002, 5). The previous day, a bomb had killed sailors and stevedores on the French freighter La Coubre, carrying a Belgian arms shipment. Rescuers boarding the ship were killed by the detonation of a second bomb. As Fidel Castro eulogized the victims, Guevara among others was on the podium. Korda (www.netssa), panning across the figures on the dais, saw Guevara’s face come into view: The look in Che’s eyes startled Mr. Korda so much that he instinctively lurched backward, and immediately pressed the button: There appears to be a mystery in those eyes, but in reality it is just blind rage at the deaths of the day before.
At the time Korda was unaware of exactly how the image would materialize, “… it was only later, while developing the film, that he realized what his camera had captured” (Anon. 1999).
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Professionally, Korda had taken more than 12,000 intimate portraits of Fidel Castro and others (Sridhar 2002). Some of his photos had earned international acclaim, yet he chose to display this particular photo on his studio wall for years. Later, he chose this photograph to give to Italian publisher, Giangiacomo Feltrinelli, who published it. Soon after, over two million posters featured Guevara’s face as students demonstrated on the streets of Europe in the spring of 1968.3 In one form or another, this image has been on the streets ever since. Scholars in the disciplines of art, design, and art history discuss the genesis and flourishing of this image with reference to the aesthetics of pop culture. Additionally, people young and old participate in countless discussions on weblogs and in magazines. Individuals within both spheres repeatedly use the photograph as a way to talk about the man himself, and there is little analysis (if any) of how the image functions in its wider uses. Nevertheless, David Kunzle’s (1997) Che Guevara: Icon, Myth and Message, provides a starting point. In the preface, Carol A. Wells (Kunzle 1997) remarks on “the omnipresent image of Che Guevara as a heroic figure, and the vitality of the protest poster as a weapon against injustice” (11). T-shirts, murals, and protest posters or prints are the most frequent canvases for vernacular versions of this image. Wells (Kunzle 1997) also observes that: Posters have transmitted and promoted Che’s ideals, hopes, and dreams and those of millions of others who dare to challenge the status quo … Hastily slapped on walls “guerrilla-style” or carefully fashioned by recognized artists in well equipped studios, they communicate instantly and directly to both literate and non-literate audiences … . The visage of the hero who helped transform history has to a degree become a commercial logo in recent years.
But Che Guevara’s image most certainly has not gone the way of the teddy bear. In the same volume, David Kunzle (1997) points out the paradox of political posters that, “obviously in the forefront of commercialization insofar as they are sold … themselves raise the cry against a process in which they are inevitably implicated … a paradox that seems to echo the life of this particular image. Regardless, the iconography emerging around the image is anything but universal: there are, it seems, as many ways of seeing Che as there are artists” (22). This seemingly endless proliferation that shows no sign of slowing down, provokes Kunzle (1997) to ask: “Why do the artists return again and again to the face, and so often the same single ‘matrix photograph’ of the face?” (24) Fidel Castro himself asks: “What, then is a Che T-shirt but an individual banner worn in the social parade?” (Kunzle 1997, 26).
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For youth, this image appears to have a unique status generation after generation. Perceptively, García, Sola, and Sánchez (1997, 209) expand: While in Cuba the public dimension of his figure persists, in the capitalist world it endures above all as a central topic for youth counterculture. The poster marks the freed territory of an adolescent’s bedroom, where nonsense is charged with signification. Certainly, Guevara is not the sole source of this imaginary of youth but in his wake some of his principle aspects converge: the nomadic impulse, the anti-systemic bent, the ideal of a heroic death, all provisions of a certain nocturnal appearance. A rebel look that has nothing trivial, given that the icons are thin only in guise … keeping above all, the spirit of egalitarian utopia, in a reference that persists mainly in youth militancy.4 (my translation)
These authors reflect a nuanced understanding of a poster’s role in a teenager’s bedroom; they imply that there is more to the choice of this image for many teenagers than a countercultural fashion sense. More is happening there than the “rebel look” but the authors do not probe further. However, they explicitly recognize the orientation of youth toward this image and what it has to offer them. As members of the Colectivo Alexis Vive demonstrate, there is an implicit recognition that this image is actually more than an image.
Chaotic Caracas After the attempted coup of 2002, the polarization of Venezuelan society into pro- and anti-Chávez groups became extremely marked. I stayed there during this period, when I was trying to open communications with a particular group—C.A.G.V.C. (Colectivo Alexis Gonzáles Vive Carajo), in 23 de enero, where there was an ongoing image war in which the role of one image in particular—Alberto Korda’s Guerrillero Heroico, the subject of my research— visually occupied a central place in the community. During my stay the almost daily demonstrations and events staged by the right-wing opposition to President Chávez’s administration were answered in kind by his supporters, also known as “Chavistas.” Television stations that had taken critical positions concerning the government provided furious and intense media coverage of the recent controversy that was galvanized by the closing of Radio Caracas Television (R.C.T.V.). For a time, the non-renewal of R.C.T.V.’s concession became a lightning rod for mass protests and virtually all but the governmentrun television stations exploited, broadcast and analyzed every incident as
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criticism of the Chávez administration. The response to any public action was always immediate as both pro- and anti-government supporters struggled for control of words such as “liberty,” phrases like “freedom of the press,” and television images seeking to sway public opinion visually by partially showing what had transpired on the streets on any given day. The Chávez administration’s refusal to renew the concession for R.C.T.V.’s public broadband, though legal, resulted in a series of organized mass protests on the streets that sometimes forced stores to close by noon. As momentum built and the university students nationwide decided to march, their lack of attendance caused university classes around the country to be suspended. Every day brought a new crisis and it seemed as though a virtually unending stream of contradicting stories were being televised. If it was difficult to understand what was happening in Venezuela from outside the nation: the view from inside was just as confusing. I found it difficult to discern whether pro- or anti-Chávez groups were stronger at any given moment. Although Chávez’ support was strong and stores would quickly run out of the red t-shirts representing socialism, the opposition regularly made itself heard. For example, during one two-week stretch, evenings were subject to deafening nightly cacerolazos from 8 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. as city dwellers stood in windows and doorways banging pots and pans, sounding sirens, and using other noisemakers. Paradoxically the streets themselves stood empty. Also nightly, Chávez appeared on television voicing his response to the accusations of the opposition with its powerful media and middle-class base. Interestingly, many grassroots movements still publicly expressed support for this president. They recognized but expressed forgiveness for his errors in the hopes that he could still create positive change in their daily lives. The C.A.G.V.C. had gone underground when I was there. Their safety was at risk because they had issued a public declaration claiming responsibility for spray painting graffiti (in red) on R.C.T.V.’s office building, and accusing those who were generating waves of unrest of attempting to destabilize the government, and of constricting life for youth with their “fascist-democratic bipartisanism.”5 As a result, I had to wait some time before trying to gain permission to enter their barrio6 famous for its murals of Che Guevara (see figure 4.2). They had named themselves after a former member of the community, Alexis Gonzalez, who was shot and killed during the counter-coup upheavals of 2002 after which they officially formed the Colectivo. In daily use, they more usually call themselves “Alexis Vive,” which translates to Alexis lives. In songs they repeat their dedication of themselves and their works to those
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Figure 4.2: Mural in 23 de enero, Caracas. (2007 by C. Cambre)
that have died in the struggle for the government-named “Socialism of the 21st Century.” The role of the dead is a constant presence; they are repeatedly and explicitly invoked. The “23 de enero,” where members of the Colectivo Alexis Vive both live and operate from, is a neighborhood historically famous for directing coups and anti-establishment activity. According to Ciccariello-Maher (2008), these “young militants” are “one of the best organized of Venezuela’s revolutionary collectives, and one whose platform for struggle and everyday practice entails the construction of popular militias fused with organs of communal power” (11). But they are one of many. Decades of rural and urban guerrilla struggle in the pre-Chávez years have given way not to a pacification and disarmament after his election, but rather to the proliferation of networks of armed, local self-defense units concentrated in the poorest parts of Venezuela … These groups have always existed in a sort of gray area vis-à-vis the revolutionary government, providing the backbone of militant support for Chávez and the process, occasionally receiving logistical support from various levels of government, and even providing safe haven for Chavista ministers during the 2002 coup. (Ciccariello-Maher 2008, 6)
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Here, in this barrio like every other poor area containing bloques overflowing into rickety self-built shanties, the C.A.G.V.C. was working on developing their social justice face. The Colectivo protects and cares for their neighborhood which is like a shrine to Che Guevara and famous for its murals covering just about every available wall. Finally, with the help of Professor Canino, a colleague who had a trusted record of activism supporting grassroots movements, a group of leaders from the Colectivo accepted Canino’s invitation to meet with me at the Universidad Central de Venezuela. The youthful 12 to 30-plus-year-old members of the C.A.G.V.C. were, significantly for my research, both being summoned by, and in turn enlisting, the Guerrillero Heroico image of Che in compelling ways. I had the opportunity to explore the significance and practice of this famous image for them. I found that the C.A.G.V.C. use and experience the image of Che Guevara in ways that creatively reconfigure spaces in a revolution within the socialist revolution trumpeted by Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez. We met in an empty classroom one late afternoon. I presented a video montage to help explain my interest in the image of Che Guevara and how it performs its cultural work around the world. I also shared ideas about how I would like to learn about the C.A.G.V.C.’s creation of new social and cultural spaces using this image, and how they bring the local to the global, the past to the present and transform it through their practice. They listened. A few days later, Professor Canino informed me that they had decided to grant me permission to enter the barrio. However Manuel, an established member, cautioned me that if I wanted to understand what was going on, and how socialism was being constructed in this part of Caracas, I would have to be prepared to experience it first-hand. To translate, he said: Sometimes foreigners, or others from outside, are interested to learn about the reality here. And we take them to see all the areas of the barrio, why? Because basically that is how we see socialism being forged. They must know what the socialist revolution is from within, and through experience. They [researchers] can’t bring people to stay in luxury hotels, they must learn from staying right in the barrio, learn from the base, and from the people.
Otherwise, he added, visitors whether academic or not will simply have “discussions from and between the views of the elites not discussions from the base (root, grassroots) with the barrio …” Clearly, the discussion I present in this chapter around how this youth-based Colectivo frames its struggle, though it may explore an anti-elite or counter discourse, is itself seen as an elite discourse
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in the eyes of the Colectivo. As a result, I feel an obligation to recognize how my privileged position informs all aspects of the research including my decision to consult with and incorporate the suggestions of Colectivo members throughout the research. Manuel’s cautionary comment revealed to me that while the Colectivo members are open to cultivating outside contact and collaboration, they have a specific idea of not only what socialism is for them but also how one should undertake the process of learning about it. Their explicit pedagogical stance is one of praxis so that having “discussions,” or simply theorizing, is insufficient. Thus they see it as necessary for those who wish to collaborate or learn from them to live in the barrio and learn directly “from experience,” or practice. I found this a surprisingly theoretical understanding from which to base all their actions. But it was to become much clearer through our interactions that their theory was action, and that action was their theory lived out. At the outset, everyone I spoke with treated me with suspicion because of my university affiliations, because I was an outsider, and because I was explicit about doing research. On one occasion Ana, another member, forcefully reminded me of my position when she commented that the bandana I was wearing had come to me too easily. It had been given to me as a welcoming gift, but is normally worn only by full-fledged members who have undergone lengthy training and which represents the group to outsiders. It is a significant symbol and mark of a specific membership status within the community, This comment was a way of saying I had not earned it by going through their formation process, or contributing my labor, and implied I would not fully appreciate its meaning and weight. Concurring, I voiced appreciation of the gift as a token of their recognition and trust in an alliance in its infancy and a continuing working relationship. As agreed, I currently continue to correspond, and share my work, with the Colectivo and respond to their concerns, both in order to contribute to the community, and in the spirit of researching with rather than on others. The experience was a strong reminder to be vigilant of falling into the trap of doing research that can be distinguished primarily by its parasitic nature, feeding off the people studied, providing career perks for the researcher, and not giving back or sharing the benefits.
Living walls of praxis The Colectivo members made themselves known through a tour of the neighborhood murals highlighting their stories, histories, and lives. Their constant
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visual presence is more than mere decor. For instance, an abandoned and decaying swimming pool was recovered through the voluntary labor of the Colectivo and commemorated with a mural (figure 4.3). This pool had been a dumping ground for 17 years and part of an urban jungle where drug-dealing and other illicit activities would take place. When it was declared unsalvageable by municipal grounds officials, the young Alexis Vivistas decided to clean it up and make it operable through voluntary labor “empowered by the example of Che Guevara,” claiming that the “fruit of this voluntary labor gave more than a physical result, but also created conciencia” (interview transcripts, 2007). The pool is now a free facility for local children and is operated by the Alexis Vivistas with help from community members. The reclaiming of the pool was an act that, in José’s words, “raise[d] the flags of working for love” in the Guevarist philosophy they “fervently” follow (interview transcripts, 2007). In a parking lot, there was the image of a man whose face is masked by a bandana (figure 4.4) presiding over a spot where people used to dump garbage. Since there is little if any garbage collection in these barrios, refuse is highly
Figure 4.3: The mural commemorating pool recovery which reads “espacios [spaces] col. Alexis Vive” acts on this space, claiming it. (2007 by C. Cambre)
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Figure 4.4: Guevara mask mural (2007 by C. Cambre)
visible; when seen from afar, rivers of garbage appear to be snaking down the hills. The bandana matches the one used by Alexis Vivistas with the yellow, blue and red of the Venezuelan flag and notably the face of Che Guevara embroidered in the center just where the mouth would be. While covered, the bandana’s wearer becomes faceless, so that the face we see is essentially
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Guevara’s giving the effect of not only a face for the faceless, but always the same one. Additionally, when the wearer speaks he or she is actually speaking through the image. After clearing the original mountain of garbage from that spot, and while having the painting done, José and others observed that after the mural appeared, the garbage permanently disappeared. They implied that it was because of the image that garbage no longer accumulated in that spot, thus acknowledging the functioning of this image: it is more than a symbol for them. Another mural (figure 4.5) became the subject of an award-winning photograph; Ana noted with disapproval that while the photographer gained a prize, nothing went to the Colectivo who had shown solidarity and expected solidarity in return. The murals I have described are only a sample of the many interspersed throughout the neighborhood primarily carrying themes, slogans, and songs to accompany the image of Guevara’s face and the covered face in depicting events or ideas. However, I am compelled to mention two other important landmarks. First, the Cuban-run and staffed medical clinic is provided within a government initiative to install a clinic in every barrio where many residents had never seen a doctor in their lives. As a group of Alexis Vivistas showed it
Figure 4.5: Parking lot mural (2007 by C. Cambre)
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Figure 4.6: Mural in honor of Kley member of C.A.G.V.C. (2007 by C. Cambre)
to me and described its significance, hope was palpable in their eyes and voices. The relationship with Cubans was friendly, and I was told that their presence was in keeping with the internationalist philosophy of Che Guevara. This Misión provides tangible evidence of the government’s claim to be dedicating resources to the poor. Second, the story of Kley, a 20-year-old leader of the group who was gunned down in the parking lot by thieves in August 2005, is not merely remembered: “it is our task to keep him alive [in the murals and minds of his companions]” (figure 4.6). This mural embodies the link between these young people and social change. Kley’s leadership, and that of Alexis Gonzalez by extension, is still in effect because the struggle gives meaning to his death and all who continue to engage without weakening resurrect him. As the words on the mural exclaim: “peleando vive en cada compañero” which means in essence that struggling (and only in the action of doing so), he returns to life within that companion. He is shown with the Colectivo’s bandana and consequently Guevara’s face, both under the watchful eye of a militant Simon Bolivar. Members wearing the bandana over their faces to engage in their social actions join Kley and share that space behind Guevara’s face, which is reserved for them.
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Acting in the “face” of Che Members of the Colectivo Alexis Vive are explicit about including images of Che’s face, predominantly the various renderings of the famous 1960 photograph, in all the murals, banners, t-shirts, and visual media representing them and their community. Because they are in a context filled with urgency and precarity, I view their use of the image as a serious and political example: this is not a trendy cool face to have on a t-shirt in Venezuela, and those who do wear it, do not do so carelessly. They thus take the memory of a photograph to create something new: new stories, new relationships between word and image, new ways of working outside of words. The central question of this chapter is this: to what extent does the Colectivo’s use of the Che image suggest an operative sign system that can constitute and contribute significantly to discourses surrounding ways to understand images, what they are and what they do? When I attended a public meeting in C.A.G.V.C. headquarters, I repeated the presentation I had shown at the university to the leaders and expressed some of the ideas I had around Guevara’s image. We discussed what the image was doing in their neighborhood, on their insignia, including why and how they had chosen it, and what power it had. For C.A.G.V.C., as various Alexis Vivistas repeatedly explained, formation as a member involves reading about what Guevara stood for, his theory of the New Man, ideas of praxis, voluntary labor, and necessarily adopting an anti-capitalist stance. Enrique told me that Che Guevara’s face is more than an image, it is a “frontera” (frontier) and the decision to use the image was made by voting in an assembly in the same way as the decisions to accept or reject mural proposals are voted on by the entire Colectivo. The C.A.G.V.C., through their actions, bring their truths into being. Their truths become visible in the image of their actions. And they see them both reflected in Guevara’s face and projected through a creative visioning. The site of figuration is mirror and message, springboard and anchor, as embodied by Alexis Vivistas’ visual tactics of variously rendering Guevara’s face and its accompanying slogans.
This is not an image If we start from Wittgenstein’s proposition that meaning is use7—thus meaning is created actively rather than existing statically within a concept or object we
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can consider how the “use” of the image of Che Guevara’s face by Alexis Vivistas provides a starting point for better understanding the significance of visual events/experiences in social movements as well as their cultural resonance. They may seem to “use” the image, but perhaps the image acts and also “uses” them. Thus we might say the image is “brought into play.” This matrix image is not only incorporated into the collective visual archive but it demonstrates an “ability to ‘retrieve’ (Schudson 1989) so many past images … [and yet] retains its own ‘life’ ” (Kampf 2006, 282). No longer merely a photograph, for members of the Colectivo the image of Che is described as, among other things, a symbol like “the red cross in a combat zone” (interview transcripts, 2007). Thinking discursively and performatively, we can ask what does the Red Cross in a combat zone say and do? Ideally, it tells people where they can go; it orients, indicates safety, and perhaps tells opposing forces that they need not attack it, nor will they be attacked from that quarter. It speaks and acts. Cultural geographer, Mitch Rose (2002, 390), suggests, performativity is a perspective that is ‘chiefly concerned with the ongoing creation of effects through encounters … rather than with consciously planned codings and symbols’. Instead of relying on the naturalized, sedimented, or ideological to explain the coherent nature of social meaning and power, a performative framework looks to the unpredictable process of interpretation, dissemination, and difference.
Thinking of the image as a verb rather than a noun, and as essentially performative (yet material), may help us jump ontologically to perceive its function differently. Rose (2002) sees the forces that give meanings as ‘enactments’ or engines of a performative system consisting of substantive acts and gestures. Enactments express primarily desire so that context is essential for comprehending practice. How do these ‘enactments’ manifest, and what meanings do they take on in doing so? I follow Hans Belting (2005) in the conviction that the meanings of images are best manifested through “people’s beliefs, superstitions, hopes and fears in handling [the] images” (xxx). In the case of this picture of Che Guevara, it presents not only a face, but also something that has been treated as a person, been spoken to, despised, or carried from place to place in ritual processions. However sacred this image has been made, this is not a cross, an icon of the Virgin Mary, or any other symbol whose authority resides in its religious connotations. Belting notes that before the era of art, images “served in the symbolic exchange of power and, finally, embodied the public claims of a community”
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(xxi). This idea of being embodied in the public claims of a community is where I see the work of the image fitting in. In a sense, a community’s claims are always in the act of claiming, they are never quite done; neither, then, is the image. How does the Colectivo in Caracas demonstrate an understanding of how images work? We have the example of the mural preventing garbage disposal in a corner of the parking lot. It is not passive; rather it authorizes certain actions and attitudes while prohibiting others. It is dynamically militant. In addition, this “activeness” is something of which Alexis Vivistas are acutely conscious. The parking lot mural frees viewers from passive reception so that a space for dialogue can open, though not necessarily through language, which then engenders a capacity to act. In terms of performative ways the image works for the Colectivo, let us consider their bandana and crest (figure 4.7). Why does Che Guevara’s face appear there? He is not Venezuelan; they have other heroes. In fact, are they not to some extent de-facing the national flag by using it as background for this image? No flag of any nation carries a face. Manuel asserts that he and other Vivistas do not see this as a case of defacement, rather it is the expression of an ideal:
Figure 4.7: Mural of bandana (2007 by C. Cambre)
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We take it up—we believe in the revolution of Che, his ideas, his philosophies. We link [Venezuelan hero Simon] Bolivar and Che … the act of having his face over flag is high impact. This is the ideal—it’s expressing a political ideal—to have Che there … modifying the landscape with the image. Che for us is the construction of the new man … to reach being like el Che, is to be more human. (my translation)
José chimes in: The figure of Che gathers all that is for us socialism, fraternity, egality, giving others value, formation, he leaves … to … construct other paths, … those are the seeds of Che they are spread around the world –the proposal here is to work the basic things of the neighborhood, as a grassroots movement, to raise social conscience and strengthen our purpose, the work we do is the raising of conscience, when we are constructing we are accompanied by Che and others who have died, “la gente come con lo que ve.” How do you convince people without showing them? And it is one thing to show, but each thing we do is a story, it had a debate and a story … Our constant practice is to create consciousness in the community.
In essence, wherever they do community work, it is seen as the incarnation of Guevara’s thought and philosophy: a kind of re-enactment of Guevara’s own embodiment of his philosophy through his actions. They want their work to be an image of that ideal of Guevara’s and they are keenly aware of the visual impressions they make. Let us think about that expression, “la gente come con lo que ve” which would translate directly to “the people eat with what they see.” Fundamentally, what is seen in terms of acts and actions is what people consume, that which nourishes, and is readily taken in. Seeing is as material and central to life as food: real and transformative. It is what is seen, that convinces. As Manuel emphasized: When we are cutting the grass, people see what we are doing, when we are cleaning the pool we are demonstrating the image of the practice, not using words to convince, if one studies the phases of Che, he is still having a revolution … he was always in the midst of a personal evolution from one form to another, that constant revolution, to keep working and constructing … is what we bring to life and our work here.
Adding: Through that image there is a whole constellation of stories and messages, and it is … a form of resistance against the model and mechanisms of the superstructure of this society … it is concepts and theories … and an ideology …
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The face of Che Guevara here, I contend, is a force/manifestation of performative systems in motion and is understood discursively. The Colectivo Alexis Vive produces its own images, murals, scenes, not as reflections of the world, or as remembrances of the past, nostalgia, history, et cetera but rather as models of behavior, perception, and experience. The images propose specific actions to some extent and, if you will, they act in the world by authorizing action. At the same time, the act of cutting the grass through voluntary labor allows Alexis Vivistas to enter the image itself, to become an image of something, perhaps of what the face of Che Guevara is to them. This agentic role takes us
Figure 4.8: Alexis Vive uniform (2007 by C. Cambre)
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beyond semiotic notions of indexicality, symbolism, and iconicity, though all these relationships play a part. The pivotal idea on which all this rests is their understanding of action. The uniforms of the Colectivo Alexis Vive carry the slogan: “Alexis Vive EN NUESTRO ACCIONAR” (figure 4.8). For Alexis Vivistas, the only way to bring Alexis back to life is through their actions, not by memorials, ceremonies, or writings (though these are also acts), but by acting in the way Alexis himself would have acted, and bringing him to it, or evoking him. And yet it is Che’s image rather than Alexis’ on their shirts because their struggle and the hope they nurture transcends the boundaries of their neighborhood, city, nation: they feel the link with all other groups who, one might say, “fly the same flag.” The direct translation for the word “accionar” would be actioning, so they say he lives in their actioning. This is a powerful way of understanding the space of action, and uncanny in its similarity to Hannah Arendt’s vision of this term. Arendt believed that political activity was not just about coming to a consensus about what was good in society, rather it was what allowed individuals agency and the power to develop their own capacities. In The Human Condition (1959, 170) she locates action as an articulation of human togetherness: “Action, moreover, no matter what its specific content, always establishes relationships and therefore has an inherent tendency to force open all limitations and cut across all boundaries.” As d’Entreves (2006, 6) observes, with this way of conceiving action “Arendt is able to develop a conception of participatory democracy which stands in direct contrast to the bureaucratized and elitist forms of politics so characteristic of the modern epoch.” For the youth in the Colectivo Alexis Vive, cleaning out a pool or providing security for their neighborhood are neither labor nor work: they are action in the Arendtian sense, which is a good fit with Guevarist philosophy. Additionally, “Arendt’s theory of action and her revival of the ancient notion of praxis represent one of the most original contributions to twentieth century political thought” (d’Entreves 2006, 6). On the ground, Alexis Vivistas are living this praxis and working through questions of meaning and identity in creative ways. What then does this Colectivo’s actioning have to do with the image of Guevara’s face? Arendt (1953, 155) gives us a hint in her epigraph from Dante Allighieri: For in every action what is primarily intended by the doer, whether he acts from natural necessity or out of free will, is the disclosure of his own image.
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Hence it comes about that every doer, in so far as he does, takes delight in doing; since everything that is desires its own being, and since in action the being of the doer is somehow intensified, delight necessarily follows. Thus, nothing acts unless [by acting] it makes patent its latent self.
Figure 4.9: Mural in 23 de enero by Colombian graffiteros (2007 by C. Cambre)
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In action, being is intensified, made manifest, revealed, and thus imaged. Dante’s words resonate, expressing an idea that is strikingly similar to what Alexis Vivistas say, and characterizing Arendtian action as having something inherently visual about it. Can we say resistance and visuality are intimately linked? When the members of the Colectivo not only emulate Guevara by bringing to life his ideas in actioning them, and breathing life into their fallen by actioning in their name, but also do all this wearing the uniform with Guevara’s face over their hearts and often over their own faces, we see how they literally become that image (and more) as they act, or, more properly, how they are imaging. The imaging, as disclosure, becomes an unmasking. We understand in motion and not just any motion but a flickering oscillatory one. Action is the key. In this sense, we can say that we image the world.
How do images image? Images work in the world differently from words. In the context of the relations between people and images in informal settings and more specifically the conditions of dissent, images challenge the regimes of representation governing a society and have the power to recompose subjectivity and praxis. French philosopher Alain Mons writes: “The new legitimacy is authorized by mediatic forms … and overall by the image in the broad sense of the term” (in Gilberti 1998, 6). In other words, we contend with an other legitimacy, other than the institutional one, capable of re-situating one’s satisfaction in defying the conventional order while forming “the light shining from an ethic that concretizes something more than accepted regulatory infallibility” (Mons 1998, 6). Where does the legitimating power of images come from? This is not a legitimacy that has legality or law at its source. Testimony to the efficacy and vitality of images exists in what they achieve. This stands apart from what people do in relation to imaged form, and is enhanced by the possibilities they envision an imaged form might achieve. Images are happening. Numerous scholars and thinkers wrestle with the slipperiness of grasping what images do because neither semiotic (art historical), nor phenomenological, nor anthropological languages suffice. For example Mieke Bal (2003) writes, “the verb ‘happens’ entails the visual event as an object, and ‘emerges’ the visual image, but as a fleeting fugitive, subjective image accrued to the subject” (9). The event/experience as image: but what is our place? Can we
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say it also looks at us: that we feel regarded if we take a moment to contemplate, confront and be compelled with/in image? Similarly, art historian Hans Belting (2005) understands that an image “… may live in a work of art, but it does not coincide with it” (42). His notion resonates strongly with Emmanuel Levinas’ (1973, 6) understanding that, a person bears on his face, alongside of its being with which he coincides, its own caricature, its picturesqueness. The picturesque is always to some extent a caricature … there is then a duality in this person, this thing, a duality in its being … We will say the thing is itself and is its image.
There is a virtual “something-more” that is essential, and not an excess that is part of the being of any “thing.” And thus, “images [are something that] happen between we who look at them, and their media, with which they respond to our gaze” (Belting 2005, 46). Just as freedom, for Hannah Arendt, does not exist until the moment it is exercised, the image only happens when someone is creating or responding to what they feel, or perceive of it. The young Alexis Vivistas reveal an awareness of the dynamics of image-ing when they describe it as a place where they can enter, and act, yet at the same time tell me it is a frontier, or an interface through which they can speak. Listening to the Alexis Vivistas describe how they conceive of this image shows they do not see it as static, nor as a unitary object. Perhaps the route is to ask not what, but when image is. Or, how images can be seen to work or occupy roles in the particular places they create. Discursive models of “reading” images ground a number of interpretive strategies tending toward blurring the text-image boundary. Thinking of an image as something that can be read is misleading. Images are not things that can be deciphered through atomistically dismembering and analyzing their elements; rather they are holistically interpreted in connection to the background in which they become foreground. We know that with images space and time function differently. I can grasp an image almost instantly, whereas I will not reach the meaning of a sentence until I have gotten to the end of it, it is a progression embodying a historical consciousness (Flusser 2000). By contrast, images, as surface, epitomize a different kind of consciousness that Flusser calls “imaginative consciousness.” For Flusser, “images are manifestations by means of which the imagination defends itself against the linear conception of the world that wants to explain it away” (2000, 127). Roland Barthes (1981) in Camera Lucida goes further by describing a fluid and transitive structure of the image. This transitivity needs to move back
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and forth as a liaison of the not-synthesis of an instance that Didi-Huberman (2005) picks up on when he calls for a return to an inflection of the word that speaks neither of imagery, nor of reproduction, nor of iconography nor even of ‘figurative’ appearance. It would be to return to a questioning of the image that does not yet presuppose the figured figure (as representational object), but only the figuring figure by which he means a process that leaves open what might become visible in the visual. Correspondingly, Jean-Luc Nancy (2005, 7) approaches the virtual tactility of the image saying, thus touched and drawn by it and into it, I get involved, not to say mixed up in it. There is no image without my too being in its image but also without passing into it, as long as I look at it, that is as long as I show it consideration … regard.
Thus, we can understand viewers themselves as becoming the ground for an image only when they enter it. Understanding image this way follows an other logic, it requires a different psychic organization, it is outside of what we now conceive as culture or cultural, or at least it is not bound by it in its existence as a force. These thinkers, in their considerations of image, reveal the complexity inherent in explicating what happens when one encounters and is encountered by an image, while highlighting its significance. In light of the actioning and imaging of the Alexis Vivistas and the literature on understanding image, my reflections on the figuring of Che Guevara’s face lead me toward seeing it as both exceeding the frame as well as providing an empty space. It is more-than and less-than image. It no longer belongs to the world as we know it, as we have learned it, but images combining energy and ideas, authorizing people to make something, giving direction, and creating new iteratives through the praxical element of authorization. The Vivistas’ use of the Che image results in the concentration of and re-dispersion of meaning, and generates new permission to act or dream or realize. Being interpellated by the image of Guevara’s face means that not only the viewer animates it somehow, but also that the viewer is in turn animated by it. The process is not unidirectional. An image images through a process of inter-animation whereby the potency of its interfacing is subject to the conditions of possibility provided by the particular and unique viewer as well as between viewers, and the material and virtual context expressed by the figuring figure. Thus the imaging of “Guevara transcended that original to project itself on the … struggles of liberation multiplying the myth” (García et al. 1997, 2).8 Correspondingly, and not by accident, the political writings of Guevara “co-form a theory oriented to the immediate action”9 (García et al. 1997,
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202). The members of the Colectivo Alexis Vive understand themselves as hermanados (en-brothered) by the image, as well as being marked by its capacity to be sin fronteras (frontierless) (interview transcripts). In the unpredictable and claustrophobic chaos of Caracas, the youth of the 23 de enero have strategically utilized the government’s occasional logistic support, made available to community initiatives (Ciccariello-Maher 2008) and grassroots movements, to articulate their own truths and expand beyond the space they were allowed originally. The recovered swimming pool, for example, was officially out of their sphere of influence but they battled with municipal authorities. Though they call themselves the vanguardia and see their task as consciousness-raising, it is not in the sense of a messianic role of becoming leaders who have a patent on a better way to do things and would thus impose it on society. On the contrary, they seek to have an impact on society by acting in the image of Che Guevara and leaving it up to individuals to decide what he or she will take from the living examples they offer. In this way they are imaging as a way to feed the community and fortify themselves which “translates concretely in the re-appropriation of one’s true nature through liberated labour, and the expression of one’s own human condition through culture and art” (Guevara 2000, 191). In their creative actioning, they enact another revolution, not the one toted by the Chávez administration, but one where they are always re-creating themselves and their community through their re-imaging of the world: an ignescent revolution always in the unfinished process of revolutioning and as such, a revolution within the revolution.
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Beyond Semiotics: The Agency of Che Guevara’s Image in East Timor
The search for a way to talk about an image—an image that began as a photograph but one that soon assumed different social, cultural, and political functions: the banner in a parade, the graffiti in a camp, and a bikini on the catwalk among other things—leads to semiotics. The media vary as do the times, places, and contexts, where everyday people occupy and find themselves interpellated by some rendering of Che Guevara’s face that recalls the Korda photo. The key question became how to speak about an image tattooed on, for example, Mike Tyson’s midriff in the U.S.A., that is at the same time a Bolivian miner’s hardhat icon, a Swiss cigarette logo, Chinese actress Fan Bingbing’s ‘look,’ fodder for artists such as Vik Muniz, and a mural for indigenous Zapatista rebels in Chiapas, Mexico. Can these disparate figurations of Che’s image be brought into conversation with each other without arbitrarily reducing them? Often semiotics is applied within sociological and anthropological paradigms with an ontological tendency toward reductionism. Knowledge is more than mere information: it encompasses understanding the articulation of information within a constellation of human interests and societal influences beyond a utilitarian paradigm that characterizes so many academic disciplines implicated in technocratic, individualistic, and consumerist world views. As an instrument to further understanding of our multi-dimensional being in the world, semiotics needs to be correspondingly multi-dimensional. It is useful to recognize how the “academic apartheid” (Sandoval 2000, 4) of artificially dividing disciplines (nutrition from medicine being a classic example) actually generates exclusionist epistomologies. Reductionism as a partial vision of a phenomenon stimulates dogmatism. Semiotics has the potential to provide transdisciplinary inclusivity and dialog, but it must be applied so that the multidimensionality of a phenomenon is kept in view, as well as its limits.
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Figure 5.1: Bolivian miner’s hat (credit Indymedia)
What is the potential offered by semiotic theory as a way to “see” this image and push its limits conceptually and functionally to show how it is not only socially reinvented as part of a “counterpublics’” (Asen and Brouwer 2001; Coleman and Ross 2010) discourse, but also to see how it authorizes and motivates actors in turn? The purpose of this chapter is to engage the thematic/ discursive multiplicity essential to Korda’s image of Che Guevara while still having some structure to orient myself around it. I approach representation as something that does more than stand for other things. I understand representation in this case, as inseparable from acting and being, it is kinetic, and mimetic. Understanding the term this way gives me permission to incorporate
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Figure 5.2: Swiss cigarette package
different ways of speaking to/with the object (theoretically and practically in terms of modality, i.e. alternatives to text) and that would provide coherence yet allow the results to be emergent. In the first half of this chapter, I provide a focused overview of key ideas I collate with an eye to having them inform the case of Che’s image. Beginning this way allows me to show where I am situated in semiotics, and subsequently reveals what I am doing differently with regards to relationality, performativity, and openness. Subsequently, I can locate the trajectory influenced by Alfred Gell’s (1998) anthropological concepts of art and agency, and the role of the concept of the virtual.
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Figure 5.3: Munoz’s food art (Cambre screenshot)
Semiotics: The history of a broken frame Semiotics today operates from post-structural frameworks and can be seen as an open and transitive structurating rather than structural approach. Quite literally, the movement ‘post-structuralism’ was a transition within one variant of semiotics itself though it happened differently in different schools of thought. For example, it was an earlier and much more belligerent rupture in France than
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Figure 5.4: Tyson tat (screenshot from revleft.com)
the later, more gradual transition in Italy. Notably, many of the key structuralist figures also became important post-structuralists, the most obvious example being Roland Barthes. Jacques Derrida deconstructed the assumptions underlying structuralism in “Structure, Sign, and Play” (1978) critiquing Claude Lévi-Straus’s Mythologiques among others, and thus changed forever the European philosophical panorama. Speculating that, “perhaps something has occurred in the
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Figure 5.5: Zapatista mural
history of the concept of structure that could be called an event,” Derrida observes that the very word event had “a meaning which it is precisely the function of structural—or structuralist—thought to reduce or to suspect” (1978, 278). He realized that as long as semiotics was oriented toward structure, there would be no room for movement, performativity, or play, and one stable Truth would calcify at the center. Many years later, he is echoed by Bal and Bryson (1991) who understand that “to think of semiosis as process and as movement is to conceive the sign not as a thing but as an event, the issue being … to trace the possible emergence of the sign in a concrete situation, as an event in the world” (196). The struggle to sustain a structural analysis forced thinkers like Barthes and Lévi-Straus to admit the limits of this paradigm and recognize that, before the rupture initiated by Derrida, they were enacting “a series of substitutions of centre for centre, as a linked chain of determinations of the centre” (Gasché 1986, 353). Even the rupture, observes Derrida, is structural: it has “the structurality of an opening” but he pushes us to recognize it cannot be so simply understood. “It is thus as little a structure as it is an opening; it is as little static as it is genetic, as little structural as it is historical. It can be understood neither from a genetic nor from a structuralist and taxonomic point of view, nor from a combination of both points of view” (Gasché, 1986, 146). An opening still needs a frame to be seen as an opening. The intimate and inseparable relationship
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Figure 5.6: Fan Bingbing (screenshot: Cambre)
between structuralism and its “post” cannot be forgotten, clearly, that empty center, or lack, can also be seen as a structural element. With regard to the case of Che Guevara’s image, one can now ask: what then, is the essential quality of a work of art or an art form? It is not about communication in the Lockean sense of understanding something by bringing it to the Same, or the consensus model, rather it is an interruption. It is an event, and thus calls for comment but does not necessarily condescend to become whatever someone wants to make of it. Further, semiotics is “centrally concerned with reception”; in fact, its object is to describe the “conventions and conceptual operations” shaping what viewers
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do; “… it will not provide or even discover a meaning but will describe the logic according to which meanings are engendered” (Bal and Bryson 1991, 186). Crucially, semiotics recognizes there are many other viewers besides those whose observations can be discovered: … As a canon has its exclusions, so has an archive: we need to look away from the obvious traces and the official records of reception, in order make the archive admit those whom it has set aside. (Bal and Bryson 1991, 187, original emphasis)
The numberless trajectories of seeing made possible in the visual text does not mean that reception is abandoned as a goal, rather the claim is shifted to one of asking: “From where, from what position, is the reconstruction being made?” (Bal and Bryson 1991, 187–9). If we understand reception in the manner being described by Bal and Bryson we must acknowledge viewers are being constructed by the object viewed at the very moment their viewing is also constructing the object. Thus, reception is always simultaneously production [and a kind of immersion]. Here, C. S. Peirce’s definition of meaning is critical. Peirce asserts that meaning is “in its primary acceptation, the translation of a sign into another system of signs” (Eco 1976, 1464). But the process is continuous; it can be followed, so it is like a metamorphosis rather than a metaphor. This dynamic view of the sign “can help to denaturalize the exclusions that have resulted from those particular framings, as well as, conversely, to use framings to counter these exclusions without falling back into positivistic claims to truth” (Bal and Bryson 1991, 204) and helps make the analysis historically responsible. Since all grammars (structures) leak, as Edward Sapir famously noted, Chandler (2002, 58) recommends searching for structural leaks, seams, and scaffolding as signs of a representation’s construction, as well as obfuscation. Another voice in the dialog, John Tagg, comments that he is “not concerned with exposing the manipulation of a pristine ‘truth’, or with unmasking some conspiracy, but rather with the analysis of the specific ‘political economy’ within which the ‘mode of production’ of ‘truth’ is operative” (1988, 174–5 in Chandler 2002, 165). The question for me becomes, how can Che Guevara’s image be recognized—which features of the Che image are indispensable in terms of a viewer’s ability to relate the translation to the original photograph or at least its interpretants in their minds and understand something by the altered renderings? Pressing forward, it is helpful to keep interrelated debates in mind as well as the concepts informing Peirce’s work that Jakobson (1976) sums up as
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the problem of the role of symbols in our creative life. Jakobson would later elaborate a fourth essential kind of sign to assist the study of the role of symbols. Though he did not publish his work in this area, we are aware of this development through Donald Preziosi (2003) who mentions his conversations with Jakobson and how they debated this fourth term. This fourth, the artifice, will be central to my development of a theoretical frame. In what follows, I will outline some of Jakobson’s and Preziosi’s ideas, and attend to them in more depth. For background, Preziosi’s concern with the impossibilities of representation prompt him to explore the implications of the invention of art, so that he returns to Jakobson’s lecture critiquing modern linguistics, semiotics, and poetics, where Jakobson demonstrated differences between factual and imputed relations between signifiers and what they signify (143), identifying, in the process, the missing term, the sign type that indicates relationships of “imputed similarity” or artifice. This term is used by Jakobson and corresponds to what Preziosi (2003) refers to as “ostensification” (144) or the ostensible—what is presented as being true or appearing to be true, but is usually hiding a different motive or meaning. Characterizing this mode of practice as something at odds with modern practice, and more in line with medieval and ancient times, Preziosi (2003, 145) returns to Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics, in which there exists a representational relationship between words and things, or, as the scholastic dictum put it, veritas est adaequatio verbi et rei (where res can mean not only thing or object but thought, feeling, or opinion).
Adequation as a relational term hints at movement back and forth from what is being fit to, and expression of truth in words or things is always this kind of adaequatio or approximation, a tending toward, an as-if. Thus this is not a “representation” as such, but a movement toward something. Preziosi (2003, 146) writes: An iconic sign relationship (all these terms refer to relationships between things, not kinds of things) is primarily one of factual or literal similarity; an artifice(i)al sign is one of imputed similarity, of adequation rather than equality … I have been drawn to this notion of artifice in no small measure because it allows us to deal with the extraordinary complexities—the fluid and openended relativities—of visual meaning in a clear yet nonreductive manner.
The notion of artifice may serve as “the locus of working on memory and meaning as processes of adequation” (147) asking us to see artworks not as
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“representations” but rather as questions soliciting our engagement pedagogically (147).
Has anyone seen the field? In his treatise concerning images, Göran Sonesson (2003, 3) similarly comments, it still seems impossible to establish a consensus among all semioticians on what semiotics is all about; and many semioticians (including the group µ) will not even care to define their discipline.
Perhaps we can begin from a premise of understanding semiotics as simply the study of signs, but what signs might be defined as is also widely debated. For example, Susan Petrilli and Augusto Ponzio (2005) begin their book, Semiotics Unbounded by considering what the boundaries of semiotics might be, and they decide that these bounds depend on the object of study: signs. However, “What signs are, and where they are, depends on the model of sign at hand” (xvii). Their approach opens the possibility of allowing the objects to inform the models, and the models to then define the terminology as it is used; in other words, they sidestep the definitional stage by stating simply “it depends.” Despite developments, few scholars today would disagree with St. Augustine’s claim: “all instruction is either about things or about signs; but things are learned by means of signs.”1 Mieke Bal and Norman Bryson (along with Michael O’Toole and the Australian School) defend a useful side to the lack of disciplinary status of semiotics because it … offers a theory and a set of analytic tools that are not bound to a particular object domain … [and] lends itself to interdisciplinary analyses, for example, of word and image relations, which seek to avoid both the erection of hierarchies and the eclectic … Considering images as signs, semiotics sheds a particular light on them, focusing on the production of meaning in society … . (1991, 176)
Since I am concerned with the workings and spin-offs of a specific photograph and how different people have taken and used it, this particular perspective at first seems promising. Sonesson (2003) observes that the point of view of semiotics “is to study the point of view itself,” or “it is mediation, i.e. the fact of other things being presented to us in an indirect way” (cf. Parmentier 1985). What semiotics, regardless of its “name” or category, gives me is a specific language parceled out between the works of various theorists (in Europe and
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beyond) who struggle with the various conundrums inherent in the art (or science?) of it. In a nutshell, “semiotics is concerned with everything that can be taken as a sign” (Eco 1976, 7). Semiotics involves the study not only of what we refer to as “signs” in everyday speech, but also of anything that “stands for” something else. In a semiotic sense, signs take the form of words, images, sounds, gestures and objects. Contemporary semioticians study signs not in isolation but as part of semiotic “sign systems” (such as a medium or genre). They study how meanings are made. By making more explicit the codes by which signs are interpreted we may perform the valuable semiotic function of denaturalizing signs. Deconstructing and contesting the realities of signs can reveal which meanings are privileged and which are suppressed. To decline such a study is to leave to others control of the world of meanings that we inhabit. Sonesson (2003, 30) concludes: “Semiotics, I will contend, is not about what something means; it is about how it means.” His emphasis is on a processual model rather than an irretrievably reductive explicatory one. The same object can mean something in one context, and nothing in another, so that is it not a “what” question but more of a “when” and “how.” Umberto Eco, beginning with Trattato di semiotica generale (1975), “contributed significantly to the encounter between Saussurean ‘semiology’ and Peircean ‘semiotics’ ” (Petrilli and Ponzio 2005, 310). It is worth taking a closer look.
I hear an Eco Eco (1976, 1) prefaces Semiotics and the Philosophy of Language by declaring his main purpose is to show that: The sign is the origin of the semiosic processes, and there is no opposition between the ‘nomadism’ of semiosis (and of interpretive activity) and the alleged stiffness and immobility of the sign. The concept of sign must be disentangled from its trivial identification with the idea of coded equivalence and identity; the semiosic process of interpretation is present at the very core of the concept of sign.
He thus directs our focus toward interpretive processes and away from reductive notions of messages to be decoded. Throughout this work, Eco reviews semiotic theoretical problems by examining the concepts: sign, meaning, metaphor, and symbol with reference to the historical development of the sign model. He
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writes, “semiotics initially emerged as reflection on the sign; but subsequently this concept was gradually put in crisis and dissolved, and interest shifted to the engendering of texts, their interpretation, the drift of interpretations …” (Eco 1984, xiv–xv). Eco (1984) stresses the need to recover earlier notions of the sign as dynamic semiosis (action involving tri-relative cooperation of representamen, object, and interpretant) and not a code to be deciphered with its built-in assumption of fixed correlations. However, some concepts, according to Susan Petrilli and Augusto Ponzio’s (2005) critique in Semiotics Unbounded, are not directly dealt with in Eco’s approach. The most significant one of these, and one they believe must be developed, is “the dialogical character of the sign and its essential otherness or alterity. As clearly emerges in Peirce’s formulation, interpretation semiotics calls for this type of development” (1976, 325). Overall, a useful conceptualization with which Eco provides us is the careful differentiation he makes between general (or theoretical) semiotics and specific (or applied) semiotics. What he terms general semiotics deals primarily with the philosophical questions, while the specific variants of semiotics are divided by technique or method of application, and how they deploy terminology in order to study their respective objects whether they be narratives, textual discourse, objects, artifacts, behaviors, and so on. He describes specific semiotics as one that “aims at being the ‘grammar’ of a particular sign system, and proves to be successful insofar as it describes a given field of communicative phenomena as ruled by a system of signification” (1976, 5). Additionally for Eco (1984, 5), “these systems can be studied from a syntactic, a semantic, or a pragmatic point of view.” Eco (1984, 5) asserts: “every specific semiotics is concerned with general epistemological problems. It has to posit its own theoretical object … and the researcher must be aware of the underlying philosophical assumptions that influence its choice and its criteria for relevance.” He does not elaborate extensively on specific semiotics except to note that each needs to take into account the ambiguities of the sign system in question and that the objects are usually “stable,” that is, they enable researchers to understand which expressions are “produced according to the rules of a given system of signification, are acceptable or ‘grammatical’ and which ones [of these] a user of the system would presumably produce in a given situation” (Eco 1984, 5). Eco describes the contributions of specific semiotics as direct impacts on society giving the example of how a study on the internal logic of road signals can help municipalities in improving the practices of marking roads. However, his central thrust is to differentiate the task and nature of general semiotics from the specific. The
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basic problem of general semiotics is philosophical, and is addressed through three different questions: (a) Can one approach many, and apparently different phenomena as if they were all phenomena of signification and/or of communication? (b) Is there a unified approach able to account for all these semiotic phenomena as if they were based on the same system of rules (the notion of system not being a mere analogical one)? (c) Is this approach a “scientific” one? (Eco, 1984, 7)
These broad questions parallel the ones I have often asked myself regarding the famous Korda image of Che. The object of study is the concept of sign itself insofar as it can explain a series of behaviors “be they vocal, visual, termic, gestural, or other” (Eco, 1984, 7). What this philosophy provides is explanatory power for what might otherwise be disconnected data. In other words, it provides coherence, one that may not be sustainable outside the framework of the philosophical assumptions but nevertheless provides a way for considering things as a whole. Eco sets up the debate in a way that allows him to move us toward recognizing that the essential matrix is between presence and absence, referring to Derrida but also Leibniz. Essentially, a sign must stand for something outside itself: it paradoxically presents an absence, but the presentation itself contains an absence as well. As expressed by Petrilli and Ponzio, meaning “is inseparable from the work of translation carried out through the processes of interpretation, to the point that we can state that signs do not exist without another sign acting as a translatant sign” (2005, 302). The structure that general semiotics is concerned with tracing is that of the “inference which generates interpretation” (2005, 38) so that understanding a sign is not only a process of recognition but also always interpretation. The understanding of a sign is always already contextually bound as was recognized by semiotic theorists breaking from structuralism. Kent Grayson (1998) writes, “When we speak of an icon, an index or a symbol, we are not referring to objective qualities of the sign itself, but to a viewer’s experience of the sign” (in Chandler 2002, 29). This explains why the image of Che can in some cases be a symbol, and in others an icon or simply an index as the first original photograph was to its photographer. Signs may also shift over time. But we are not looking at a closed system since a sign, finally, does not denote its own meaning. So that, “To know that ‘water’ means the same as H20 and
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that H20 means the same as ‘acqua,’ and so on, without knowing what these terms refer to, is not enough for them to function as signs” (Petrilli and Ponzio 2005, 318). The metaphor of the encyclopedia illuminates and allows us to approach what Eco is theorizing. The encyclopedia represents something that has no center, we are always somewhere in the middle of a labyrinth made up of a network of interpretants that is virtually infinite because “a given expression can be interpreted as many times, and in as many ways, as it has been actually interpreted in a given cultural framework; it is infinite because every discourse about the encyclopedia casts in doubts the previous structure of the encyclopedia itself ” and “it does not register only ‘truths’ but, rather, what has been said about the truth or what has been believed to be true as well as what has been believed to be false or imaginary or legendary, [imputed] provided that a given culture had elaborated some discourse about some subject matter” (1984, 86). In this context, interpretation becomes a matter of hypothesis where one can posit a local description of the net or labyrinth, but it will necessarily result in a myopic vision as no one can see “the global vision of all [the labyrinth’s] possibilities” (83) from their particular node. Understanding the work of semiotics as interpretation rather than decoding can account for the “irreducibly other as theorized by Bakhtin and by such philosophers as Emmanuel Levinas” (Petrilli and Ponzio 2005, 327). Peirce signals this essential interconnectedness through a relation of otherness “as being present in all signs when he says that their interpretants are somehow always other than themselves” (Petrilli and Ponzio 2005, 339). Eco, with others such as Peirce and Bakhtin, agree it is not the sign itself that functions as a container of meaning, rather meaning exists in the relations among signs. What is the significance of these ideas with respect to the visual?
Jakobson’s fourth sign-type: Artifice Jakobson proposed a fourth type of sign, the artifice, to address the relationship of “a message which signifies itself, [and] is indissolubly linked with the esthetic function of sign systems” (Jakobson 1968, 704–5, in Allingham 2008, 171–2). Despite Jakobson’s uneasy relationship with C. S. Peirce’s work, it seems to be a productive option that would not neglect intention, expressivity, and affect. This fourth type resonates with some of Umberto Eco’s ideas. For Eco, comprehending what they stand in for as icons is not as important as “recognizing a content ‘other’ for which the represented object stands” (1984, 17). They
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are also called symbols “but in a sense opposite to that adopted for formulas and diagrams. Whereas the latter are quite empty, open to any meaning, the former are quite full, filled with multiple but definite meanings” (1984, 17). Luckily, he does not avoid the ambiguities and inextricable overlaps between these categories. Consequently, Eco writes: “The nature of the sign is to be found in the ‘wound’ or ‘opening’ or ‘divarication’ which constitutes it and annuls it at the same time”(1984, 23). I conceive of the nature of the sign type Jakobson put forward just such a “wound” or “open” type sign in that, as artifice, it ceases to be once it is recognized as such, while yet being, simultaneously providing a multiple beyond. Artifice is in a sense designed to be pierced, it is the only self-conscious sign type and the only sign type whose intention is to represent something other or something more than what it seems to. Like disguise, once it is seen-through it ceases to disguise it ceases to act in that way. Yet, we can still derive pleasure and an aesthetic knowing from seeing and seeing through the disguise. It is artful and beautiful. And we can move in an oscillatory motion in the seeing/knowing. I contend that the aesthetic is part of the meaning content of a sign but that not any sign-type will do. The renderings of Che’s image are always the same image, or topic, but being reproduced in limitlessly varied media, contexts, and figurations. There is structure and yet it is open, I propose that the format of the four sign types is similar in many ways. The fourth position, which Greimas regarded as explosive, is occupied by artifice, which is a modality that splinters like a fractal into multitudinous possibilities. It is real, but virtual, in the sense that it is actual and possible at the same time depending on when/if it is recognized. Thus though related to a structure, it is fluid. Such a relation allows us to see the structure as something artificial that allows us to look at form through abstraction but does not generalize, or reduce it. Donald Preziosi (2003, 146) says artifice “allows us to deal with the extraordinary complexities—the fluid and open-ended relativities- of visual meaning in a clear yet nonreductive manner.” In short, artifice might be a conceptual tool to face kind of challenge posed by the image of Che Guevara in being fluid, openended, and irreducibly complex. Like Eco, Preziosi (2003) is clear the sign is “a relationship between things (of any kind)” (31, my emphasis). Preziosi’s (2003) pivotal observation is that Jakobson demonstrated the differences and importance of “ ‘factual’ and ‘imputed’ (or conventional/virtual) relations between signifiers and what they signify” (143). Thus, Preziosi (2003) pairs up the notions of artifice and ostensification to show the relation is “presented as being true or appearing to be true, but usually
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hiding a different motive or meaning” (144). He also links it to the Aristotelian adaequatio, or adequation, or “fitting,” “adjustment” (145). In this sense the artifice is an invitation to imagine otherwise. What is the final fit that cannot quite be represented? The notion of artifice requires a necessarily participatory relation. This allows us to understand how “artworks are questions posed and adequations mooted, soliciting engagement so we may learn to see” (Preziosi 2003, 147). It is a pedagogical relation at the core not only of ostentation or adequation but of presentation and a pointing to something that one can only co-construct. It is a double motion because in a way the artifice is telling us that it is pointing to something and not pointing to it at the same time, but being, inhabiting or embodying, it in some way that can only emerge when we catch on. Additionally, artifice tends to point at its own constructedness. Because only this sign type emphasizes and exemplifies human skill in doing something, as such it stretches into the realms of finesse or cleverness, as well as intention, something that none of the other sign types incorporate. But this is also what makes it delightful and effective, we are always negotiating artificial signs in our daily lives, and we are more skilled at it than we imagine ourselves to be. Preziosi delineates the difference between the icon and the artifice: “An iconic sign relationship is primarily one of factual or literal similarity; an artific(i)al sign is one of imputed similarity, of adequation rather than equality” (2003, 146). I would further explain by differentiating from the relationship that a symbol has as a sign. A symbol’s relationship to the signified is more or less arbitrary and not necessarily similar to imputed similarity. As Preziosi (2003) noted: “The truth—the veritas—in words or things is always one of adaequatio or approximation or a tending toward, an as if ” (145). A metaphorical relation means one object is understood in terms of another, but is more complex than the merely substitutional. One of the key words in understanding this semiotic mode should be “parallelism” but also the notion of the virtual. At the close of 2008 both Peter Allingham and M. J. Sidnell published works addressing artifice. Both are worth looking at. Allingham (2008, (174) adds: “Metonymic presentation works through design, layout and, e.g. the signatures of brands and logos. These space types catalyse experiential selection and creative interactive behavior through, e.g. branded space (cf. Höger 2004).” There seems to be an overlay of metonymy and metaphor to produce the artifice. But I would reverse the statement: “Metonymic presentation works through design,” to read, “Design works through, among other things, metonymic presentation” because
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we need to acknowledge the creative role of design as something that can invent new connections. The metonymic is perhaps one technique in an entire constellation of possibilities within the creation process of artifice. I am hesitant to give it a leading role. Having said this, it is easy to recognize the images of Che that do not even remotely endeavor to gesture toward the man because they are being used to represent attributes such as rebellion. This is a symbolic move, and I wish to differentiate it from artifice. Finally, Allingham (2008) turns to Preziosi to observe the four kinds of semiosis afforded by the four types and remark on the ability of artifice to: “represent by presenting, by showing, producing, which is why artifice or presentation must be on, or simply be the limit of representation, i.e. the aesthetic form or expression that captures and engages the human senses before any cognitive processing or understanding takes place” (cf. Preziosi 2003, 137ff. in Allingham 2008, 173). Artifice seems to be about to slip off the map of semiotics. Allingham’s (2008) critical observations lead to two very useful insights: first, “it seems that Peirce’s typology of signs is insufficient when it comes to dealing with the expressivity of these objects” (171–2: my emphasis). In observing the expressivity of objects, I contend that Allingham is looking at their virtual qualities. I see a clear link between what artifice is able to do, the notion of expressivity, and the virtual. Expressivity must be addressed, and would say that only artifice can do so. Secondly, Allingham (2008) introduces the idea of liminality with respect to artifice. Again he is actually dealing with the real of the virtual. He writes: “In the quadrant of metaphoric presentation, physical space tends to be virtual, i.e. being established through aesthetic means for the sake of pleasure or growth” (175). So the space for the event is real but virtual, and aesthetic means are the vehicle for creating it. This space is extremely productive because it provides an alternate place where one can be free to think differently from how one is colonized to think in everyday life. Allingham (2008) recognizes not only that the physical space tends to be virtual in the fourth quadrant, but also that this is a volatile and about-to-be-destabilized, or in his words: “a semiotic mode that is liminal, interfacial, as it represents through presentation” (177). In being liminal it is at the edge of the relationship of representation common to other sign-types in that it is always-about-to-become something else. It teeters on the edge of unpredictability. Sidnell (2008) rightly observes that, “Jakobson may have designated artifice a distinct mode rather than a kind of symbol, within the Peircean triad, in
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order to make the ‘artistic character’ distinctive at the modal level” (18). But he critiques Eco for not offering a semiotic understanding of beauty in his broad survey in History of Beauty (2004). Something that, for Sidnell, is critical to a concept of semiotic praxis. Indeed Sidnell seems to stop dead with the remark: “With this Beauty, semiotics, intriguingly, has nothing at all to do … In a very wide-ranging survey, he [Eco] has seen no need to broach the issues of whether a sign may be beautiful, insofar as it is a sign; and whether beauty as such be a sign” (Sidnell 2008, 23). For me this is the critical opening where artifice and by extension the virtual enter the dialogue.
Exploring artifice: The semiotic black market I would like to orient some of the thoughts in this section around an understanding of the structure of the sensible that messes with our desire to separate form and substance. Levinas (1987, 7–8) describes it this way: “The discussion over the primacy of art or nature—does art imitate nature or does natural beauty imitate art?—fails to recognize the simultanaeity of truth and image … it is the very structure of the sensible as such. The sensible is being insofar as it resembles itself.” In what follows, I will posit simultanaeity as something that flickers or oscillates in tune with one’s attention or awareness. C. S. Peirce’s basic sign theory provides for three basic relationships between signified and signifier, icon (based in resemblance), index (based in causality), and symbol (based in convention). As we have seen, Jakobson proposed artifice as the fourth main to show a fourth relationship not accounted for by the index, icon, symbol, triad. Peirce’s initial distinction among three relations between signans and signatum (Peirce 1931–5, 1.558) is: 1. An indexical relation based on factual contiguity. 2. An iconic relation based on factual similarity. 3. A symbolic relation based on imputed contiguity. Jakobson wrote: [The] interplay of the two dichotomies—contiguity/similarity and factual/ imputed—admits a fourth possibility, namely, imputed similarity.
And so the table looks like this:
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factual imputed
contiguity
similarity
index symbol
icon artifice
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In other words, something can be said to be artifice when it is done in an ostensible manner. Something created by artifice is said to be “effectively” real. Artifice is usually distinguished from, and often implicitly or explicitly opposed to, actually or really: in other words something that is apparently, but not necessarily or really.2 Here I would stress that while there is a virtual element active in any rendering of artifice, it is no less real that what would be deemed concrete. We can say that artifice is a self-conscious sign. At the core of my understanding of artifice as the fourth sign-type is the idea that it is performative, in the sense that it “brings about” the allegorical connections as well as presents mimetically the structure of the sensible. The idea of the structure of the sensible3 is something that Rancière takes up and applies to both politics and aesthetics which links it back to what he says about changing the world when you interpret it. If we have more nuanced ways of interpreting the world, we can have new shades and tones to our understandings, which in turn enable us to act in new and perhaps more powerful ways. In other words, if we can see how some representations are not simply what they appear to be but at the same time are other things, without losing whatever it is they apparently had, it means we don’t have to categorize them as one thing only, it allows for more fluidity and possibility. We can connect this idea to what Peirce writes about experience being our only teacher as cited by Portis-Winner; “its action takes place by a series of surprises, bringing about a double consciousness at once of an ego and a non-ego directly acting upon each other” (CP, 5.53 [collected papers of Charles Saunders Peirce]) (Portis-Winner 1999, 29). The pedagogical moment of a sign exists only at the moment of its making or becoming in the recognition by the viewer or interpretant. Learning always already works through virtual levels and through our ability to comprehend artifice. The masking of the object in order to speak to it more directly is how we can see this functioning. Therefore the role of intention is central, as are the parts played by guise and disguise, gaps and misrecognition. The sign that effectually disappears as soon as you recognize it is disguise. Yet it is no less really representing what it purportedly represented in the first place. The artifice as a sign type and the specific relation it bears to the signified can be better understood if we keep in mind the idea of having a duplicity of awareness to better grasp the quasi-presence and imminent visibility of the
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oscillating imaginary. We can understand artifice as an ignescent sign, one that is capable of bursting into flame at the moment of recognition, the moment one recognizes it as an as-if, and as also not-that-but-other.
From artifice to the virtual via parallelism: Enter Gell Artifice, can aesthetically impute similarity through aesthetic means and so it becomes an “as if ” in a relationship that can be characterized as a parallelism. Thus, artifice is an actualization of the virtual (relationship). For Jakobson, following Hopkins (1865/1985), the principle of parallelism does not connote identity but rather correspondence through either points of similarity or contrast. The artifice is virtual (because what we ‘see’ is other than what we are being shown, though we also see that) and intrinsically ambiguous, while it represents through a parallelism, represents by showing something that it is not to talk about the thing that it is. In other words, aesthetically an artifice is what it is not, and thus seeks its meaning in unlikeness by triggering the viewer’s recognition through visual cues and thus embodies a different relationship with the signified that an icon, index, or symbol. At this point Gell (1998) reminds us that: “some ‘representations’ are very schematic but only very few visual features of the entity being depicted need to be present in order to motivate abductions from the index … Recognition on the basis of very underspecified clues is a well-explored part of the process of visual perception. Under-specified is not the same as ‘not specified at all’ or ‘purely conventional’ ”(25). We can see this in many of the instances when Che Guevara’s image is little more than a silhouette. Jakobson saw parallelism as equivalence rather than identity; the equivalent pairs are, in turn, juxtaposed according to the principle of similarity or contrast4 (6). In order to move on, we need to keep in mind such things as Merleau-Ponty’s “duplicity of awareness” and Foucault’s (1968) discussion of Magritte’s painting C’eci n’est pas une pipe as a “calligram that inaugurates a play of transferences that run, proliferate, propagate and correspond” (49). At times I have referred to the term virtual. My use and understanding of this concept is built on four separate but interrelated developments of “virtual” by Peirce, Shields, Rancière, and Didi-Huberman. I will briefly explain each of these approaches to the concept, while noting that they do not necessarily contradict each other. The virtual is key to understanding the workings of imputed signs. “The dictionary definition of ‘virtual’ was penned by none other than Charles Sanders Peirce” (Skagestad 1998, 2). For Levinson, “Peirce defines
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a ‘virtual’ X as what you get when the information structure of X is detached from its physical structure” (Skagestad 1998, 2).5 In a four-part ontological frame, Shields positions the virtual as “real without being actual, ideal without being abstract” (2003, 25) and pairs it with the concrete as the other part of the axis of the real. He follows Deleuze in seeing the opposite of the really existing as the possible: “The possible is never real, even though it may be actual; however, while the virtual may not be actual, it is nonetheless real” (Shields, 2003, 25).6 The sign-type of artifice is functioning as an “as-if.” Bergson writes “the virtual image evolves toward the virtual sensation and the virtual sensation toward real movement: this movement, in realizing itself, realizes both the sensation of which it might have been the natural continuation and the image” (1988). There is a duplicity here: a double movement that fits nicely with artifice. Our experience of the aesthetic object necessarily authenticates a perception of the world beyond the senses through the authenticity of the virtual. Thus we can say that an object happens, that is, it enters into experience. Artifice is purportedly one thing, while it also is virtually another, it is the trickster’s favorite. The Trojan horse, for example, was a gift and at the same time, a weapon. For Rancière, the artifice is first and foremost a political sign mode. In On the Shores of Politics (1992), he looks at what both Plato and Aristotle think democracy is and compares them. He writes: “… in Book IV of the Politics where Aristotle proposes that there should appear to be elements of both types of regime (oligarchy and democracy) and yet at the same time of neither, a good polity being one in which the oligarch sees oligarchy and the democrat democracy (42: my emphasis). How is it that one group can see one thing and another sees something completely different? We know the oligarchs are controlling the “appearance” of the regime to suit themselves and to manipulate the democrats. There is an art to making something look like something it is not quite, it is an “as-if ” redistribution of the sensible, in a word—artifice. Rancière continues and directly links to the notion of artifice: “It is worth pausing to consider the function of artifice here, for it embodies all the complexity of Aristotle’s conception of politics” (1992, 42–3). He sees Aristotle considering politics “not as illusion or machination but as the art of life in common” (43). Artifice is the principle whereby people play each other’s games and it is not simply reducible to being cunning. The space of shared meaning that makes legal words effective is for Rancière, a virtual space. He emphasizes: “Those who take the virtual for the illusory disarm themselves just like those who take the community of sharing for a community of consensus” (50).
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Finally, in a fourth variation, Georges Didi-Huberman (2005) elaborates his theory of visual figuration by distinguishing between what he calls the visual, the visible, and the virtual. In his triad, the visible equals what we can see, the visual indicates something that cannot be seen (for example in Botticelli’s Birth of Venus her hair seems to be blowing in the wind as she arrives on her shell, the wind itself [indicated by the hair but unseen], is the visual), and the virtual is a presentation of something unrepresentable. Using Fra Angelico’s painting of the Annunciation, as his primary exemplar, Didi-Huberman takes the whiteness of the walls and the blank-paged book in the Virgin’s hand to illustrate the virtual. He writes: “The whiteness is so simple, yes. But it is so altogether like the blank inside of the little book held by the Virgin: which is to say that it has no need of legibility to carry an entire mystery of the Scriptures” (2005, 22). Thus, “Fra Angelico simply used the presentation of the white—the pictorial modality of its presence here in the fresco—to ‘incarnate’ on his level something of the unrepresentable” (24). In this way the white paint, while being white paint, is also an act and an acting of whiteness, the uninscribed, the blank, the yet-to-be-but-promised, an event in the making, and all that it would have been for Fra Angelico. His conceptualization of the virtual resonates strongly with the performative aspect of artifice I underlined earlier. These four conceptualizations of the virtual are compatible yet different elaborations of how the virtual can be described. Without ignoring the multiple trajectories and nuances in the concept, I will understand the virtual as real but not concrete, noticeable but not visible, recognizable through its effects, impact, or actions/incarnations designating its information structure. In the next part, I move to an engagement of salient concepts and application in a concrete example.
The case of Korda’s Che in East Timor I started with traditional semiotics as a ground from which to approach the dialogic nature of the sign and its alterity; it is essential woundedness simultaneously constituting and annulling it; its ability to register divergent relationships between signified and signifier; its coherence contingent on the framework; its insufficiency when it comes to the expressivity of objects; and its failure to address the art of dissemblance directly. I also found that these limitations with respect to affect and the world of movement and fluidity could be responded to through some of the work done by Roman Jakobson, and later by Donald
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Preziosi on the notion of artifice. Some useful aspects of this notion relate to the possibilities provided by the “as-if ” or the enveloping of the virtual, in the nature of artifice achieved through multiple coding and other tactics that appear as a general strategy of parallelism and the way one was able to interpret these events seemed to happen through abduction. When a viewer recognizes the virtual (and invisible) qualities of visible image (of Che Guevara), the possibility of the agency of the art or artifact is created, and thereby the efficacy of the virtual. I am going to develop this theory through an example. By looking at how the image of Che Guevara has mobilized in East Timor, I will link artifice with parallelism and the virtual to show how the virtual is efficacious in allowing an image to become a social agent. I chose to look at this particular part of the world because I was somewhat startled at the magnitude of the image’s presence and impact in a place so geographically distant from where Guevara himself was active. As a way to tie semiotics and the notions of the virtual and artifice with visual images, my approach draws on some of Alfred Gell’s (1998) principles from Art and Agency. I agree with Gell that most “literature about ‘art’ is actually about representation” (25) and thus sidelines the performative and agentic aspects of objects, something the social semiotic approach fails to fully appreciate. Second, I would accept Gell’s definition of art as “a system of action, intended to change the world” (6) and thus the emphasis is clearly on “agency, intention, causation, result and transformation” (6) rather than mere symbolic communication. To ground his theory, Gell (1998) uniquely expands the notion of index far beyond traditional semiotics by re-framing the notion of cause. He posits that an artist is the ‘cause’ of a work of art in the same way as fire is (usually) the cause of smoke. But smoke does not always mean there is a fire, and a smile does not always mean there is a happy friendly person behind it, thus Gell (1998) problematically insists that art does not always function semiotically. However, I think it possible to see more nuanced semiotic function by expanding the notion of semiotics to include a kind of semiotics of the virtual, although it is more accurately understood as a kind of anti-semiotics because it is not direct representation being evoked, rather active presentation. Although broader, this tactic would still exclude the issue of expressivity. Gell’s technique is limited by his failure to address intention in his expanded approach to index as the key difference in how “cause” comes to be vis-à-vis the traditional formulation. This intention is key to the notion of artifice because the similarity or link between signified and signifier is an imputed one, the sign is operating primarily on the level of the virtual.
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Che Guevara appears Another day, I head out of Dili towards the rugged hills that fracture the countryside. The trip takes a little longer than expected, as the road is a graveyard for careless drivers, twisting and turning upon itself like an itchy snake. My own vehicle is merely run off the road by a bus and later suffers a blowout … Other requisite stops include photo opportunities, stops to ask directions, and the obligatory gape-break, when the totally amazing presents itself—such as a warrior-clad cowboy with Che Guevara medals on his chest, riding a pony along the roadside. In this region, altitude means attitude. (Simmons 2009)
On the blog, East Timor – I was there before it became big I came across this photo (figure 5.7) taken in Dili. It was entitled Che as a simple indication of the subject. There Guevara’s face appears in two-tone on the billboard within an unknown building’s enclosure. What is the image doing so far from home? I would venture it is acting and thus performative in the sense that it demarcates, announces, and protects to some extent that territory while interpolating those who resonate with that particular image. It is accompanied by one of the usual slogans “Hasta la victoria siempre,” as well as other words too blurred to decipher. Abutting the mural/billboard is another one depicting a room with three windows and a figure speaking at a podium with some kind of lamp or microphone being held on a rod extending toward him. Yet this more involved depiction is completely disregarded and made ambiguous by the puzzled photographer/blogger Daniel Gerber who writes beneath the photo: “Che Guevara seems to be really popular here, I don’t know why.” Clearly, the image does not speak to everyone. Indeed my brief Internet searches seemed to confirm the popularity of Guevara’s image in East Timor as it quickly revealed a number of references to, and images of the revolutionary guerrilla fighter; for example a mural where the two girls are posing for the shot, in St. Crus (figure 5.8). When travel writer Norman Lewis visited Baucau in 1991, he described the city as “one of the most disturbing places in the world … a disheveled town full of barracks and interrogation centers with high, windowless walls and electrified fences. Baucau had been the end of the road for so many real and assumed supporters of Fretilin …” (Simmons 2009). A suitable place for Che’s image? Why is the image of Che in East Timor? Why at this time? Why this particular figuration?
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Figure 5.7: Dili (Flickr, franjer79)
Figure 5.8: Che Guevara in St Crus, Dili 2008 (Flickr, franjer79)
Background/Context East Timor state is half of the island of Timor, the islands of Atauro and Jaco, and Oecusse in Indonesian West Timor with just over a million people speaking languages Tetun, Portuguese, and Bahasa Indonesian and seems irrelevant to global business or power politics (Rogers 2002). After 455 years, the Portuguese abruptly abandoned this colony in 1975. Merely nine days after East Timor declared independence; Indonesia invaded and installed a genocidal regime. “The thought of East Timor falling into the hands of Che Guevara look-alikes
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horrified Henry Kissinger, and so he gave Suharto the nod to invade. Australia, too, wanted to get its hands on the oil …” (Rogers 2002). Rogers’ description of “Che Guevara look-alikes” made in hindsight is telling. It indicates something was happening in the East Timor of 1975, and indeed a resistance movement Fretilin (the Revolutionary Front for an Independent East Timor) had been born, and an enigmatic leader, Xanana Gusmão, had emerged. It also indicates a virtual link between a mental image of Che Guevara that somehow contaminates those who have similar ideals and are willing to act on those notions in terms of sovereignty or independence. During the 24 years of Indonesian brutality, Xanana Gusmão and a handful of guerrilla fighters, who numbered no more than 160 at their peak, waged war against 22,000 Indonesian occupation troops in the island’s dense jungles. In 1992, Gusmão was captured and imprisoned. “He quickly became one of the world’s most prominent political prisoners, writing poetry and letters to keep the dream of independence alive. In 1997 Mandela visited and called for his release” (McCarthy 2000). In an article called Xanana Gusmão, el Che de la jungla, Luisa Futoransky (1999) recounts “They have frequently compared him to Che Guevara, Robin Hood, and Ho Chi Minh.” Elsewhere he “was described by the press and analysts as a “poet-revolutionary” with the charisma of ArgentineCuban guerrilla leader Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara, who had become an almost mythical icon of revolutionary struggles around the world” (de Queiroz 2007). From prison, Gusmão issued a challenge of a referendum on full independence for East Timor: “Whoever is afraid of a referendum is afraid of the truth.” In 1999, Suharto’s successor, B. J. Habibie, surprised everyone—particularly his own military—by taking up Gusmão’s challenge” (McCarthy 2000). Again, the image of Che is noted in the press: As the massive Indonesian ship left Jakarta, thousands of people filled its seven tiers … . Among them were hundreds of East Timorese returning home to vote in the referendum. The majority were students, … but there were also many refugees from the violence of anti-independence militias in East Timor… . The clothes and luggage of those filling the decks were decorated with East Timorese and Falantil7 flags, independence slogans and pictures of Xanana Gusmão and sometimes Che Guevara. (King 1999)
When Indonesia lost the vote, Indonesian-controlled militias butchered the Timorese and unleashed mass destruction causing the majority of the population to flee their homes in sheer terror. However less than a year later, TIME Magazine reported in 2000:
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But something remarkable is happening on this half an island. Gusmão, 53, a former guerrilla leader and political prisoner, has tapped into reserves that are out of reach of the World Bank and the IMF, reserves of willpower and pride the people themselves barely knew existed. Exuding the authority of Nelson Mandela and the charisma of Che Guevara, Gusmão has been traveling the country spreading his vision of the future …
Clearly there is a striking political and ideological parallel between Gusmão and Guevara that is reiterated by mass media outlets but also pulses steadily at the grassroots level. And, in fact they fought the same enemy, for the same reasons, just in different times and places, and with different outcomes in terms of their own personal stories. The rebels demonstrate a self-conscious adoption of some aspects of the Korda image, as well as of the linked slogans, haunted by this famous matrix image. For example, in this old black and white photograph we see Xanana standing in the center with some of his rebel troop and the banner with the phrase “Patria ou Morte” the Portuguese version of the famous cry by Fidel Castro on the fateful day in 1960 when the famous photograph of Che was taken. And there it stayed, stuck. Here there is a clear alliance with the revolution in Cuba which became, in Che’s words: the image of what is possible through revolutionary struggle, the hope of a better world … an image of what it is worth risking your life for, sacrificing yourself until death on the battlefields of all the continents of the earth … . (Guevara, E. 1961 [my translation], YouTube)
Figure 5.9: Xanana Gusmao
Figure 5.10: Xanana and Falintil forces in East Timor
(Photographer unknown) Available at: http://jakartagreater.com/tour-of-dutytimortimur/)
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How can this old photo from East Timor somewhere in the jungle represent the Cuban revolution, its victory, and the Guevarist stance? Gell (1998) differentiates between modes of representing in a useful way: “The ideas of ‘representing’ (like a picture) and ‘representing’ (like an ambassador) are distinct, but none the less linked” (98). The slogan on the banner is an index of Castro’s words in a sense. The banner is there like a representative of the Cuban revolution, not iconic but an “artifactual body.” (Perhaps one can say this mode of representing is indexical in that smoke can be seen as the ambassador of fire?) The basis of the agency of an artifact is rooted in the notion of the distributed object or distributed person in the Maussian understanding of gifts as actual extensions of persons so that in a parallel way the reproduction of an image whether it is of an object or of another image is as-if a gift from that prototype. For instance, “Constable’s picture of Salisbury cathedral is a part of Salisbury cathedral. It is, what we would call, a ‘spin-off ’ of Salisbury cathedral” (Gell 1998, 104). Similarly, every iteration of Che Guevara’s face taken from the Korda photo can be seen as a spin-off. Consequently, if “appearances” of things are considered material parts of things, “then the kind of leverage which one obtains over a person or thing by having access to their image is comparable, or really identical to the leverage which can be obtained by having access to some physical part of them” (105). This would explain many of the attacks on art works representing historical figures such as the ‘slashing’ of the Rokeby Venus by an angry suffragette.
Figure 5.11: Xanana with East Timorese Fretilin forces (photographer unknown) (Available at: http://jakartagreater.com/tour-of-duty-timortimur/)
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Even more dramatically evocative is the color image (see link for Fig. 5.11), where Che’s image seems to be in direct conversation: the hair-beret-facial hair combo is unmistakable for those familiar with the Korda photograph (though they have adopted red for the berets). Judging by how young Xanana looks, I would place it in the earlier years of their resistance. We can look at this photograph in more than one way. If we see it as the image entering into Xanana and his troop, then it is as-if a case of possession. The image (prototype) is an agent motivating the fighters (index) to take on its qualities both visible and virtual in a cause–effect relationship and we the viewers of the photograph are the recipients in a passive position but again motivated by our knowledge of the image to infer that it is the source of these fighters looking as they do, with the particular stance in preparation for the photograph. We can also look at this photograph and see it as Xanana and his troop entering the image. In this case it would be as-if a dramatic performance where Korda the photographer would have the agency of a playwright in taking Che’s photo which becomes the prototype represented by the actor (fighters) who actively index and are thus in an agentic position along with both the photographer and the image, in contrast to the audience (us) who witness the dots connecting through abduction. However, at the exact same time, we know this is neither a possession nor a play. We know this is East Timor and these fighters are revolutionaries in their own right. The image-inhabiting, or image-becoming is an artifice and the transformation, while visually signaled, is virtual. However, it may serve to provoke fear in those who see these fighters or this photograph and remember the success of Guevara in the Cuban revolution. In this way it can be seen to be efficacious. The artifice is an actualization of the virtual (relationship) manifesting belief in victory for one: it is not actually Che Guevara, but through a parallelism, it is just as if it is! In the student rally shown here, there is an emanation or leaking of the image onto one of the young supporters, who dons the beret as if to match the image: a black and white portrait of Xanana in profile. In a way I see it as Che’s image in Xanana’s image in and acting with this youth. Finally, and at the root of why I was compelled to write about East Timor, is this intriguing photograph (Fig. 5.13) taken supposedly in “Malibere village, East Timor” according to The Globalism Institute RMIT Report in 2004. This institute, based in Melbourne, Australia, manages a number of research projects and one in particular under the umbrella of Sources of Insecurity focuses on East Timor: “social conflict in East Timor, violence, nationalism,
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Figure 5.12: Manifestazione pro-Xanana (photographer unknown. Available at: http://www.balene.it/enzo/timor/mailtimor.html
Figure 5.13: Che Guevara, Malibere, Artorde de Araujo’s house (2004 RMIT report)
social movements, globalization and global protest movements” and is supervised by Damian Grenfell. Oddly, nowhere else in the over 70-page document did another reference to this image, or an explanation of why it had occupied an entire page in the document appear. Neither was there another mention of Guevara outside the fascinating caption reading:
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Che Guevara graffiti on Artorde de Araujo’s house in Malibere village, East Timor, 2003. In part, because it was illegal to depict images of Xanana Gusmao, graffiti of other bearded revolutionaries was used as a sign of resistance
If this caption is accurate in describing the situation, this is something of a reversal of the situation found in the color photograph of the rebels discussed above. This is an image clearly labeled “Che Guevara” but for those in the “know” it is really a virtual Xanana Gusmao. The image becomes the site where subordination is transformed into resistance through tactical conversions that allow what Sandoval (2000, 35) calls a “dialectical movement of subjectivity that disallows, yes—but at the same time allows—individual expression, style, and personality.” Che’s image “is a congealed residue of performance and agency in object-form, through which access to other persons can be attained, and via which their agency can be communicated” (Gell 1998, 68). The notion then, resonates with but goes beyond what Roland Barthes’ had explored in his denotation (literal), connotation (sociocultural, personal) approach to visual meaning. It does this because its tactic is one of disguise, and of imputed similarity, rather than a gesturing at different levels or orders of signification. Gusmao is invisible in the image, and yet it is an image of Gusmao, at the same time as being no less an image of Guevara. We can conceive of Gell’s (1998) agency for an artwork/image as a “modality through which something affects something else” (42) and is absolutely relational and context dependent (22). So, given the necessary context, “whatever type of action a person may perform vis-à-vis another person may be performed also by a work of art, in the realms of imagination if not in reality” (66). But we know that a more nuanced understanding of reality takes into account the real of the virtual yet not concrete realm. Because we recognize agency by its effects, only when someone acts as an agent can they become an agent and not before. They must “disturb the causal milieu in such a way as can only be attributed to their agency” (20). An artifact is rarely a primary agent, but can act as a secondary agent. For example, when a child feeds a doll because it is hungry, the doll is a secondary agent to the degree that it is able to channel, or become a conduit for the primary agent’s action. Similarly, “social relations only exist in so far as they are made manifest in actions” (26). We can say that the prototype Che Guevara appears as agent since we know the activities of the artist in that case were subordinate to prototype (Korda did not plan the original photo and in various interviews he speaks of it snapping itself when Che suddenly appeared in his viewfinder). The index here (a material
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entity motivating abductive inferences) is the painting on the wall done by an unknown Timorese artist. The prior index is the photograph of Che taken by Korda. While the prototype is Che Guevara, the virtual prototype (for the Timorese artist) is Xanana Gusmao. This Timorese artist is inspired by the Korda image: it acts on him/her and makes him/her its recipient. At the same time, the public and possibly those censoring institutions of the establishment are also recipients that may either be incited to violence if they understand the artifice at play, or simply allow the mural to pass. Those who understand the process of “masking as survival under colonization” (Sandoval 2000, 84), and the place of the “trickster who practices subjectivity as masquerade … .” (Sandoval 2000, 62) are those who have developed skills of semiotics as resistance and a consciousness that can identify oppositional expressions of resistance. There is a constant oscillation between the material and virtual of the image. This shimmering is especially salient when the intent is one of imputed similarity signaled through the use of artifice to create a parallelism that can be recognized by those interested in the subversive restructuring of knowledge and who hold an elective affinity with the oppressed.
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Alchemy: Indigenous and Artistic Methods for Understanding the Work of Che’s Image
The Guerrillero Heroico is the one image of Che Guevara, among the many that were taken of him, that has been chosen as a calling card for protesters and the oppressed around the world who are “seeking affective forms of resistance outside of those determined by the social order itself ” (Sandoval 2000, 45). The question of why this particular picture is special moves us into different spaces of inquiry. In other words, this work is not about images and what they do, but is concerned with one particular image and the widespread response it provokes and actions it allows at the level of a persistent non-institutionalized global phenomenon. To some extent, each person creating, modifying, appropriating, or using this image, whether in the interests of social justice or not, contributes to a global collage of Che Guevara portraits. UCR/California Museum of Photography director Jonathan Green considers that, “Korda’s image has worked its way into languages around the world. It has become an alphanumeric symbol, a hieroglyph, an instant symbol. It mysteriously reappears whenever there’s a conflict. There isn’t anything else in history that serves in this way” (Lotz 2007, online). Although I would insist it is more than “an instant symbol,” the picture does reappear practically everywhere; it does this because people continue to choose this particular image to reproduce, again and again. The historic figure of Ernesto “Che” Guevara himself embodies a stance of integrity in resistance to, and recognition of, Anglo-United States of America imperialism anywhere in the world. For many, he also represents values of collectivism, humanism, modesty, integrity, and an uncompromising pursuit of social justice. And those who wish for a visual cipher with an anti-imperialist position that is “revolutionary, anti-capitalist, a different socialism” (Löwy 2009, 2, my translation), this particular image of Che Guevara incarnates those kinds
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of sentiments bolstered by ardent desire for change and social justice. The image also indicates solidarity with the political or socioeconomic underdog, the powerless in the class struggle. Perhaps a global vacuum of moral and ethical leadership also provokes a turning to this image, people look to do it justice (by honoring Guevara’s historical memory and his work) and do the people who use it justice, because it is often marginalized people struggling for change who are interpellated by it.1 Here, I explore this image as an agent of struggle and inspiration guided by Chela Sandoval whose The Methodology of the Oppressed (2000) provides an umbrella under which I connect with principles of Indigenous Research Methodologies to inform and pilot the artistic method of collage enabling a certain listening to what the work asks of the artist. In the end, it is the experience of the image itself and its community of interlocutors who are my teachers. However, working through artistic methods facilitates a process of investigation and learning that is alchemical: the creative process, despite its focus on a particular project at hand, necessarily transforms both the artist and material through the creation of the work/s. Hazan (2001) echoes “Gell’s comment that the essential alchemy of art is to make what is not out of what is, and to make what is out of what is not” (8). I would add that the artist does not escape from this process of metamorphosis. Creative consciousness becomes in an artist through the process of creating the work.2 In this way the artistic process parallels the IRM principle of a personal journey in accordance an Indigenous epistemology that follows the “basic assumption that individuals and society can be transformed by identifying and reaffirming learning processes based on subjective experiences and introspection” (Ermine 1995, 102). What I attempt is complex and is saturated by my personal experiences with the image that I call a soundscape. The soundscape indicates an immersive and ambient experience; a holistic seeking that was made possible by learning from Indigenous epistemologies and artistic processes. The Cree ethicist Willie Ermine (1995) best expresses this simply as: “The experience is knowledge” (104). Throughout, I locate collage as an anti-fascist and de-colonizing method, corresponding to Guevara’s own ethic. The soundscape is also a theoretical framework with epistemic priorities and principles highlighting Sandoval’s “differential consciousness” (2000, 91, 96, 111, 141) and is consistent with IRMs. I thus tell a story of the research journey of coming to the final collaborative collage: Chenigma: medi[t]ations on life and death representing my ongoing learning on and with the famous image of Che Guevara called the Guerrillero
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Figure 6.1: Chenigma (6' by 4' multimedia collage: C. Cambre)
Heroico. I will describe the collage, and most significantly its process of collective creation emanates from a period of a few years of participation in IRMs such as research circles, dreams, ceremonies, and the guidance of elders toward understanding the image.3 The principles of IRMs informed by Shawn Wilson’s (2008) Research is Ceremony respond to Sandoval’s (2000) call for a “theory uprising” (79). Artistically, I draw on T. P. Brockelman’s (2001) The Frame and the Mirror: On Collage and the Postmodern to flesh out an emerging philosophy of collage. Ontologically consistent, both IRMs and artistic inquiry emphasize relational and contextual understandings over atomized information, holism over hierarchies of epistemology, participation over institutionalized expertise and reject the artificial separation of research and daily life. Ross (in Hanohano 1999) expands: There is a wide-spread Aboriginal understanding that thought or information must be shared in ways that leave it open to the listeners to take whatever meaning they wish to find in what they have heard. That is the premise of storytelling, where the storyteller will never say, “That’s not what I meant.” The Western preoccupation with such questions as “What did Shakespeare really mean in Hamlet?” is nothing more than our preoccupation; the pertinent question for most Aboriginal peoples seems to be something like “What did Hamlet cause you to think, feel, or do? (208)
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Using collage as a mode of presentation4 as well as a mode of investigation problematizes the notion of a single author of the work, and I am able to include and honor all my known and unknown collaborators who continue to work and be worked by the Guerrillero Heroico. This image opens diverse interpretive possibilities and allows me/us to show rather than simply tell something about the image. Rooted in art making under IRM principles, the process is less reductive and more evocative; and can become a process that opens space to honor both Che Guevara himself and all those whom he has inspired with or without his image. As I work through the ontological and epistemological features and challenges of collage, I attend to congruencies with IRMs. However, to do justice to these IRMs and their impact on my work/self requires an entire piece that I have yet to write from my position as a non-aboriginal Latina/artist/ nomad/student.
Understanding the collage form: Ontology and epistemology Author Michael Ondaatje observes, in his novel Divisadero that, “everything is collage, even genetics. There is the hidden presence of others in us, even those we have known briefly. We contain them for the rest of our lives, at every border we cross” (2007, 70). Crucial to the collage process, is the artist/researcher’s ceding of control, and allowing things to happen. When creating a collage, I notice that different pieces of the fragmented images seem to resonate better with each other than others. Some images and fragments I notice for the first time, although they have been sitting there on the table from the beginning. When I move them and they sit in a different relation to the other material around them, something starts to happen: ideas form.5 At the same time, other images become less interesting and seem to fade away from my attention and the work itself helps set the direction. Opportunities in the process of working are encountered that were not envisioned when work began, and the process begins to give its gifts. Just as the images based on Korda’s Guerrillero Heroico are inexhaustible and belong to no one location or identity but still respond to a set of coordinates with respect to meaning-construction, the work of collage has that torn edge that evokes the missing piece while reconfiguring the fragment as part of another image. Collage honors fragments by listening to how they call to one another, and in so doing creates a space of play.6 Ideas develop through the process as active documentation, though they may later be layered over or
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altered, at the same time a “set of coordinates” evolves with categories dimensions/scales, and interpretive possibilities opening through “contextual aptness” and “economy of means” (Brockelman 2001, 224). Today, more and more, researchers are turning to collage as a fruitful method of data collection, analysis, and representation. Its use is also a burgeoning area within arts-informed methodologies (Seymour 1995; Brockelman 2001; Butler-Kisber et al. 2003; Finley 2003; Robertson 2004; Butler-Kisber 2007). This shift is due, in part, to a growing recognition that our world is suffused in collages whether in magazine, newspaper or billboard advertisements and on the Internet. We understand that everything is connected, layered, and fragmented. We find collage in family photo albums, quilts, and handmade birthday cards. Collage, we would argue, is a particularly democratic art form. It can be technologically sophisticated, as in the use of image manipulation software; it can be composed in a dispersed fashion, and then combined, like the AIDS quilts; or it can be very low-tech, using glue, scissors, paper and images or found objects. (Norris 2008, 483–4)
A collage method is led by experimental and creative practices. And collage ontology assumes certain properties as essential. The Oxford English Dictionary (OED) defines collage as “an abstract form of art in which photographs, pieces of paper, newspaper cuttings, string, etc. are placed in juxtaposition and glued to the pictorial surface” [OED online]. The final collage is not always abstract, although we can see that the composite pieces have been abstracted from their original context. The materials used may or may not be pictorial and textual representations of recognizable objects. For example a paint chip doesn’t represent a recognizable object, it is the object. When placed next to each other, however, these materials may modify their earlier meaning by creating a new constellation of meanings. The effect is cumulative though nonlinear: For most of the twentieth century, collage has been understood as being a unique mixture of “real” and “represented” elements. The Encyclopaedia of World Art, for instance, says that collage’s chief innovation is the “inclusion of a piece of reality within a painting [that] projects it into the world of objects, narrowing the distance between painting and spectator (597).” (Beyers 2004, 2) Thus we can state that the connective yet generatively fractal-like principle of multiplicity is the core of the collage ontology. For Brockelman (2001), collage practices – the gathering of materials from different worlds into a single
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composition demanding a geometrically multiplying double reading of each element—call attention to the irreducible heterogeneity of the “postmodern condition” … also resists … pure difference. (10)
Each fragment has more than one being, or life, and participates in multiple dialogs. In a sense, each fragment can be said to be heterotopic. Non-closure, in the sense that something can be added or removed without necessarily making the piece look more or less finished, is another core ontological property. The property of non-closure is intimately related to that of multiplicity but is focused more on the possible combinations. (When is a collage finished?) Art critic Donald Kuspit (1983) observes, that the indeterminacy of collage, its compositional narrative, does not gel fully. As such, ‘concrescence is, in effect, never finished, however much there may be the illusion of completeness … the incongruous effect of … collage is based directly on its incompleteness, on the sense of perpetual becoming that animates it’. (127–8)
Any gesture toward closure in a collage is an illusion and impossibility because no fragment exists in a hierarchy above or below any other. Both on the level of the art piece itself, and also in terms of my own research journey, the focus is on its being ongoing. While closure is imaginary and impossible, since one fragment cannot be privileged over another: possibility for meaning is created between them and only their relations to each other define them. Collage is relational internally and externally, and requires the artist and the responsive viewer to think or act modally, as one does when engaging in performative speech (such as a vow or promise, to say it is also to do it). Because meaning construction with/ in collage requires a “metatransitive relationship between an agent, an act, and an effect …” at once productive of an effect on an object and “constitutive of a particular kind of agent … by means of an action” (White 1992, 181, in Sandoval 2000, 155) a specific mode of consciousness is required. This consciousness is crucial to interacting with the form of collage as an intervention in social reality: as the agent (viewer or artist) comes to form meanings through a dual action on the collage and at the same time on oneself, oscillating back and forth. Sandoval (2000) insists, “it is only in action and BY action that the practitioner can be said to exist … becomes constituted”7 (155). The agent both acts and is acted upon simultaneously and “calls up a new morality of form that intervenes in social reality8 through deploying an action that re-creates the agent even as the agent is creating the action—in an ongoing, chiasmic loop of transformation”9 (Sandoval 2000,
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Figure 6.2: Chenigma Fragment (C. Cambre)
185). Although the artistic process can be more emergent than deliberate, the intuitive choices are part of the evocative meaning-making structure (Norris 2008, 95). This type of consciousness finds harmony with the principle of relationality in IRMs, or the interconnectedness of all things, and insists on the “transformative nature of research” (Weber-Pillwax 1999).
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Like the Aboriginal storyteller in Ross’s account (described earlier on page 123), there is not one “story” or “interpretation” viewed as “correct” in collage. In terms of truth claims, collage never fails to engage the shadow of doubt by resisting representation. Brockelman (2001) helps us understand this property of resisting representation: “collage problematizes any view of art as medium for truth … [and] is both representational and antirepresentational … On account of its representational peculiarity, collage questions dogmatisms of all kinds …” (7). He notes there is, “in collage a compelling rethinking of philosophical issues of truth and history that has otherwise failed to gain adequate articulation …” (Brockelman 2001, 8). For example, in World War II Germany, collage emerged as a form used to critique Adolf Hitler: it was recognized as having an antifascist political stance. It is widely known that artists such as John Heartfield, and some members of the Berlin Dada group, such as Kurt Schwitters, Raoul Hausmann, and Hannah Höch were pioneers in critical collage and photomontage and were forced to flee from Nazi persecution (Schwitters, for example, had his art confiscated by the regime and was wanted for an “interview” with the Gestapo). In an in-depth analysis of the political praxis of John Heartfield’s collage, Spence (1981) writes about how juxtaposed elements set the viewer’s thoughts in motion “as she seeks to resolve the enigma they present” (56): This enigma cannot, however, be solved within representation because its solution lies outside the montage in the world of political action and struggle. Drawing on Brecht’s theory of distanciation, Stephen Heath views Heartfield as calling ‘commonsense’ beliefs into question by restructuring signs in such a way that he ‘punctuates “representation” with “formulation”, a process Brecht refers to as “literarization”’ This then is not ‘a “form” but a mode of analysis, the very mode of understanding of dialectical materialism…where the spectator is placed in a critical position’.” (56)
Thus form itself is already a mode of analysis. Additionally, it is a form that has emerged worldwide, it has no nationality, no home—essentially collage finds home in exile, like its many fragmentary components (who nonetheless call to each other), and like the image of Che himself. Che’s image is at home wherever there is a need for revolution and radical change in favor of oppressed groups. Historically, as a man he was decidedly anti-bureaucratic and relentlessly open and honest in developing his philosophy as an innovative Marxist humanist thinker.10 When one has a point of reference, one is at home anywhere: I will return to this notion. Another feature of collage is its foregrounding of its own constructedness and artifice as well as the aspects of non-form vital to the style. Again, it pushes
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forward the viewer’s necessary participation in creating meanings from his/her experience. When we create space by revealing the evidence of surgery, textual scars, or imperfect seals, in a piece of writing or art, which is not open in the sense of being lost, but has openings, we also make it possible for something to happen in that space. We can understand, then, the form itself as meaningful and calling upon the viewer to act while creating opportunities to learn. Gilles Deleuze (1995) understands this space as a place where meanings can come to be. “Things and thoughts,” he writes, “advance or grow out from the middle, and that’s where you have to get to work, that’s where everything unfolds” (161). The space of the opening is a present-non-presence, a place of possibility where the impossible can be/come and the reach of the creative arena expanded: Form in its widest meaning, the visible universe that envelops our senses, and its counterpart, the invisible one that agitates our mind with visions bred on sense by fancy, are the element and the realm of invention; it discovers, selects, combines the possible, the probable, the known, in a mode that strikes with an air of truth and novelty at once. (Hammacher 1981, 45, my emphasis)
Abraham Marie Hammacher’s (1981) counterpart to form, invisible and agitating at the same time always becoming, in process, and in relation to the visible (form) is considered vital to invention. The non-form that must exist but cannot appear can be usefully conceptualized as the chora (receptacle/place). For Jacques Derrida, chora is in-between the sense and intellect (Brockelman 2001, 88). Similarly, Julia Kristeva explores the chora as a space of ambiguous relationality. In her early work, Kristeva proposes a space capable of holding impulses and ambiguous sensations predating language as a poetically disruptive mode of being that enables the rupturing of the monolithic paternal discourses. Kristeva also describes the semiotic11 as “structurating”—that is, its “role” is to make a space (the chora) on which language (the organization of social [symbolic] interaction) can work. Her reworking of Plato’s semiotic chora is potentially disruptive to the patriarchal symbolic because it ruptures the latter’s normality by recalling one’s own marginalized (and originary) selves and becomes central and compelling rather than peripheral and debased.12 Essentially, as a space of possibility incarnated by gaps, and the missing elements of the fragments included in a collage, the semiotic chora is never manifested. In Plato’s Dialogue, Timaeus asks, “What is that which always is and has no becoming; and what is that which is always becoming and never is?” (8). Brockelman (2001, 88) states:
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Chora is neither space in general (the universal form of space) nor a place (the specific sensuous material of myth). It is place, rather, as a relationship that can only be induced, can never directly appear – since every appearance follows either the path of logos or of mythos.
Furthermore, if we have an “image” of what place is, that means we conceive of that image as in a place. “Since there is a place that it doesn’t include, the image can’t give adequate picture of place itself ” (Brockelman 2001, 88). Pedagogically, the non-form that is constitutive of collage as a form, reminds us how inextricable form and content are. It may be stating the obvious, but to underline, the materiality of experience is profoundly pedagogical, as Ellsworth (2005) insists when she writes about sensations as vital to learning. As such, the form (relations with time, space, bodies, and objects) must be considered part and parcel of content (learning/ knowledge/understanding). Recognizing collage as something not completely open-ended, but resisting closure by containing openings, allows us to attend to non-discursive elements and glean potential, albeit uncertain meaning from them. These fragments/ spaces are like a broken frame through which spirits can enter and perhaps play. Breaks in a message’s continuity disrupt its unity and make us stop temporarily whether to imply emphasis, critique, or to denote a change in direction or form. With these ideas in mind, we can examine apparent interruptions and physical dis-unities, and ask what is present in the non-presence of these fissures. Thus, the figured aspects become no more or less interesting than the not figured, or not presented. It is important to recognize that the pieces comprising the collage are acting both individually in their own right as well as in relation to the other pieces with which they coexist. Everything is related and connected. Within and between pieces is the idea/act of collage that allows them to both form and inform each other in productive ways. Additionally, the device of repetition (if used) can function rhetorically as a trope to emphasize something or it can further the notion of an incomplete discursive space, paradoxically tracing inscriptions and indirectly dismantling the idea of artist as singular. In sum, it is vital to recall the paradox that collage brings together interpretability while denying any satisfying explanation because it “demands attention to each of the individual elements as individual … we can’t just look at the picture, instead we must figure it out” (Brockelman 2001, 134) and oscillate “back and forth between several interpretations in a kind of free association of forms” (Brockelman 2001, 137). Viewers of collage are not given direction but
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space, and we are invited to act: this is a powerful pedagogy. In collage, any figure can function simultaneously as the field for another figure, positioning can inform the surface and, though certain directions may be privileged, they are never univocal or final. Thus, collage practices “the gathering of materials from different worlds into a single composition demanding a geometrically multiplying double reading of each element” (Brockelman 2001, 10, original italics). It is a postproduction art that “testifies to a willingness to inscribe the work of art within a network of signs and significations, instead of considering it an autonomous or original form” (Bourriaud 2005, 16). If each element has at least a double reading, then the interpretations of relationships between elements correspondingly multiply. It is multiphonic and borderline, full of intersecting and ruptured borders. It can also be conceived as a borderline site/sight: it becomes a Derridean “passe-partout” (master key, or universal pass). Derrida (1987) describes this space as being: Between the outside and the inside, between the external and internal edge-line, the framer and the framed, the figure and the ground, form and content, signifier and signified, and so on for any two-faced opposition. The trait thus divides in this place where it takes place. The emblem of this topos seems undiscoverable. (12)
Essentially, the key to learning how to understand is recognizing the necessity of continual movement, or oscillation between the binaries in order to even experience or pass through the places where meaning can erupt. It is important to take into account these slippery terms that Derrida coins because they not only help form what Roland Barthes calls an “anti-language” (1973a, 9) but they allow us to see the important role of collage as an art form whose epistemological stakes are parallel to both Derridean and Barthesian projects.13 Brockelman makes it very clear that collage is philosophically “a practice negating of all static space for epistemological reflection …” (Brockelman 2001, 49). No dogmatic static or entrenchment of hierarchies is permitted in the collage as theoretical framework. Philosophically, collage can be understood as a method ethically corresponding to Sandoval’s (2000) The Methodology of the Oppressed. She describes the five principle sites in its topography or, “a set of critical points within which individuals and groups seeking to transform dominant and oppressive powers can constitute themselves as resistant and oppositional citizen-subjects” (54). According to Sandoval (2000), her outsider methodology calls for the development of the skills necessary for “accomplishing sign reading across cultures;
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identifying and consciously constructing ideology; decoding languages of resistance and/or domination; and for writing and speaking a neorhetoric of love in the postmodern world” (3). Thus the “technologies” guiding this methodology are “semiotics, deconstruction, meta-ideologizing, democratics, and differential movement”14 (10) that then become, “dialectically linked when viewed through a ‘differential’ mode of oppositional consciousness and social movement” (3). This differential mode or differential consciousness is the key to maintaining a mobile and efficacious resistance. She understands Derrida’s notion of différance as a way to decode and deconstruct ideologies of domination (such as patriarchy, and colonialism) and thus to “develop a new tongue” as Derrida calls it (as cited in Sandoval 2000, 148, her italics). Notably, Derrida insists: “not only is there no realm of différance but différance is even the subversion of every realm” (1973a 153, original italics) and “unsettles every rule … always in the process of transformation,” just as we can see happening in collage. In fact, Derrida also emphasizes the notion of play that helps generate a fresh sign system with a “certain laughter and with a certain dance,” modes of proceeding that are “foreign” to the Western dialectic (Sandoval 2000, 148). These multiphonic possibilities created through collage are rooted in the act of juxtaposition: “mixing up the earnest, eccentric, unpredictable, and ludicrous elements” (Hooke 2001, 14) and “present[ing] juxtapositions of images and gaps, theories and descriptions” (13). It is built on principles of juxtaposition, on the interplay of fragments from multiple sources, whose piecing together creates connections and insights that form the basis of discussion and learning. The very nature of collage is interdisciplinary, juxtaposing multiple fields of endeavor and situating the practitioner and his or her work within and between them (Brockelman 2001). He also holds: The cycling between an awareness of fragments and origins on the one hand, and a unified meaning on the other, goes beyond static representation to a dynamic, almost animated sense of the relationships between meanings that is both the heart of the collage experience and the idea of “uncertainty as knowledge.” (187)
I see this uncertainty as a resistance to the desire to define and pin down a unified meaning of the artwork. Additionally, I understand it as being folded into Ermine’s (1995) equation of knowledge and experience because it is the ability and willingness to hold uncertainty that permits experience to take on a pedagogical aspect. Harold Rosenberg (1989) has also noted the condition of uncertainty essential to collage, writing:
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… the use of collage marked a radical change in modern art by taking disparate images and signs to highlight the ambiguities of life and our understanding of it… . In the hands of artists collage takes on a revolutionary task of bringing together disparate realities and fragments of identity. (cited in Hooke 2001, 13)
Rosenberg adds, “Collage manifests itself, … in modern art modes as a kind of adversary within the mode itself ” [63]” (cited in Hooke 2001, 12). By virtue of its very form, collage becomes a way of questioning the idea of representation itself. It is by nature political and has a “revolutionary task.” Cubists used collage to reveal an ambivalent attitude toward art as a commodity and condemn readings that excluded further or multiple interpretations. Thus for Brockelman (2001), “the collage gesture is as much pedagogical as it is oppositional” (75) and viewers remain working through questions. “Collage” he states, “presents us to ourselves in the mode of doubt” (113) as fruitful as it is unsettling. Fruitful and pervasive as collage might be (even flower arrangements can be understood as collages) as the ultimate vernacular form, we have few tools to unpack its significance. The Sage Encyclopedia of Qualitative Research Methods includes an entry on collage as an arts-based research method describing the meaning-making process as one based on juxtaposition of diverse materials: It is not meant to provide one-to-one transfer of information; rather, it strives to create metaphoric evocative texts through which readers, audiences, and patrons create their own meanings on a given research topic. Usually, material is taken out of context from a range of sources and used to create a new assemblage from the bricolage collected. What underpins the creation of research collages is the attempt to construct meanings about the research question and/ or process, the participants, and emerging themes. (Norris 2008, 94)
And I would add to this list, the attempt to construct meanings about one’s own self and place in the world.
Journey through the image: Coming to the collective collage I embraced collage as a mode of representation when I recognized that images are actively doing something in/with the world rather than just representing the doing of other things, people, or agents. An image depends on the viewer to respond. These responses are like activations, things happen in the viewing and being viewed, you have to be some kind of receptive viewer—people are interpellated by the call or Barthesian punctum15 of the image.
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I understand image as a more nuanced and powerful way to express my awareness of the meaning and work of the Guerrillero Heroico than words and both follow and honor those who take up this image as an expression of what they desire/hope/need, are or want to be. While I recognize the difficulty of evaluating images in academic work, I can only encourage viewers and readers to move toward a “differential consciousness”16 (Sandoval 2000, 12) and bypass institutionalized and standardized interpretive strategies based around a framework of cause and effect, or explication. The word differential refers to a process once described by Derrida as unnameable and “defined by Anzaldúa as the workings of the ‘soul,’ and by Audre Lorde when she describes the … place where ‘our deepest knowledges’ are found” (Sandoval 2000, 5). Images can help us reach the place of soulful knowledge: they have great potential for enhancing the differential consciousness Sandoval espouses. Words cannot escape ideological constraints as images may, because—in being nonlinear—they are necessarily more open to multiplicity and critique because the cracks are visible. Essentially, academic prioritizing of words over images is an artificial hierarchy that needs subverting in order to more fully reach the radical semiotic called for by Barthes and echoed by Sandoval, as well as being key in the process of recoding all tools of hegemonic communication in order to subvert, and create space for subverting controlling narrative and creating space for other stories. Exemplifying just such a differential consciousness in process, IRMs open paths to move toward this way of being and knowing and unlearning of “White expertism” (Graveline 2000, 363). In Research is Ceremony, Shawn Wilson (2008) introduces an Indigenist research paradigm centered on recognizing the spaces between things as sacred, and that ceremony can bridge that space as long as we practice relational accountability. In order to inhabit ways of knowing based on a relational epistemology we need to engage in research that is reciprocal, respectful, and responsible. Wilson explains how ceremony helps us build a closer relationship to an idea following a process that includes living a congruent lifestyle, preparing the space, assembling the ingredients, engaging in ritual (a thinking-together), experiencing illumination, and finally the incorporation of new knowledge into our approach. Through the process, meaning is revealed (partially/intermittently) rather than defined. Meaning, within IRMs, just as through collage, is not an analysis of “Hundreds of journal pages handtabulated/Dissected into relevant themes./ Subjective data committed to linear form./ Decontextualized from their life narratives./Partial Stories clipped and coded” (Graveline 2000, 363).
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My own witnessing of the efficacy of this image in people’s lives prompted me to dwell on it for a long period of time in order to better appreciate how this happens. Despite years of having lived and worked with Ernesto “Che” Guevara’s image intensely, only once has his presence surfaced in my dreams. Through ceremony and engaging in a desire to honor the principles of reciprocal, respectful and responsible research, I was able to inhabit a place of thinking-together and hear what the voices of those with me were saying: thus I was finally able to receive the dream. My own difficulty with coming to terms with Guevara’s image was highlighted by the dream in which Che appeared (below p. 000). Recalling Florensky’s (1996) words, “… the dream happens whenever our consciousness hugs the boundary of the crossing” (44), I was moved to respond, knowing all the while that this was but one more phase in a journey that seemed to have no clear destination. Wilson (2008) reminds us that the space between things is sacred—these musings reveal the way my thoughts moved between things in that space where raw ideas were being formed and ingredients assembled. I wondered whether something about the image had been sacralized, or was functioning through the spiritual similar to how a religious icon would. Those icons occupying a religious connotation operate on another level; these are not the icons that are simply based on resemblance that Charles Sanders Peirce talks about when he defines types of signs in semiotics.17 To address this kind of icon another level of analysis is necessary, one I cannot do justice to here, that requires a spiritual journey and recognizes that the image is somehow participating, watching, and channelling energy. Like many others, I was drawn in—“solicited” in the Derridean sense—to follow where this research journey would lead me. Derrida writes, “For ‘everywhere the dominance of being’ is continually ‘solicited by difference—in the sense that solicitare means, in old Latin, to shake all over, to make the whole tremble” (in Sandoval, 150). Like Barthes’s sublime abyss that disturbs, agitates, and incites meaning with its zero degree, the work of Derrida’s différance similarly rattles the cages of every kind of human categorization serving to rupture older meanings and provide space for the new. Both Che Guevara and psychologist-philosopher Frantz Fanon examined the kinds of subjective position created by colonialism and its attendant imperialism. Sandoval (2000) identifies Fanon’s aim as “to deconstruct the kinds of citizen-subjects that colonialism produced” (85). The de-colonial process of transformation is a process of changing the world by re-creating yourself first in a conscious and ongoing way. Frantz Fanon believed emancipation would
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only be possible if citizen-subjects “incarnate” (129) a new type of subjectivity. Fanon describes this process as occurring through a “slow,” painful, re-“composition of my self in an ongoing process of mutation” (cited in Sandoval 2000, 111, 23, 51). The choice for Fanon is to speak in and along with the white world and to reflect its consciousness by embodying its rhetoric, or to found a new, unhabituated real with its own concomitant language forms, meanings, psychic terrains, and country people. The process Fanon identifies is one of endlessly creating and re-creating the self. Sandoval (2000) notices the deep impact on Roland Barthes’ works by the 1951 work of Frantz Fanon, but critically adds, “the problem for Barthes in Mythologies became how to go about describing the methodology that permitted the colonized to see, hear, and interpret what appeared natural to the colonizer as the cultural and historical productions that they were” (87). Guevara, who was also a close friend of Fanon’s widow, endorsed the idea of re-making, re-creating the self continuously through action: his stance led him to evolve a theory of the New Man.18 For him, as for those who embody a Guevarist stance, one’s actions make the world. In this way, one’s actions represent and cohere with one’s beliefs and one thus becomes an example,19 and is imaging Guevarist philosophy. Che was determined to work toward a post-empire world regardless of the knowledge that the project would be much bigger and take much longer than one generation: he still gave his life to it. He knew that death was part of the picture of challenging empire and he accepted that he would have to personally pay that price as so many had before him, and so many would afterward. This research journey has illuminated the significance of Guevara’s ethics in life as core to the theoretical underpinning of that famous Korda image and the way many people are being invoked (brought into play) by it. When people invoke and are interpellated by Korda’s Che, they invariably participate in Guevara’s mission as a living dream. After all, art is “materialized dream, separated from the ordinary consciousness of waking life” (Florensky 1996, 44). Although the image is not always taken up that way, it can be said to be less alive in those cases, less agentic, more static, however those uses (that spur or authorize cultural/social/political action) are not at the heart of its unceasing popularity and capacity to solicit viewers. These viewers are the ones who maintain his image in perpetual motion and spawning of reproductions: these viewers are the ones who have made the image a global phenomenon and in doing so have all become contributors to the global collage. His arresting expression in the photograph is a mix of rage, grief, and determination at the brutal deaths of over 80 people caused by the
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rigged explosion on La Coubre in the harbor of Havana. The act of terrorism organized by the C.I.A. to weaken and undermine the young Cuban revolution was exactly the kind of cowardly act Guevara despised. Additionally, he would feel responsible for the innocent and was reportedly one of the first who ran to help the injured in the harbor.20 Those who remember the dead, bring them to life again and again until justice is done, and, if you remember them, the dead always accompany you. Thus, when protesters in Argentina call out the names of the dead, their names are echoed in a chorus of “presente!” and those seen as martyrs are called to join in as witnesses to injustice. The image appears as a philosophy and way of commenting on the human condition, a spiritual element that most of the time those of us in a Western paradigm pretend is not there. The spiritual principle of self-renewal is one of recreating, not Che, but ourselves because that is what he did, if we are going to make change we have to recreate ourselves. There might be a fear that recreating his image is somehow colonial, but not when it is a participant where the “alchemy of identity, and potential metamorphosis of reality are made possible” (Sandoval 2000, 133), not when the image works as a conduit to recreate ourselves, or a point of reference. Underneath the popular uses of this photograph or some rendering of it, is a sense that it provides a compass. In Place/Culture/Representation, Duncan and Ley (1993) write that “[t]he scientific way of knowing is no longer regarded as a privileged discourse linking us to truth but rather one discourse among many” (28), and thus we can embrace other ways of knowing and being as valid and productive. In Maps and Dreams, Hugh Brody (1981) relates how the man he interviewed described the old people as knowing their point of reference. As a result, they can hunt moose in their dreams, mark the beast and find it in waking time. If they are in the bush, they are never truly lost. orienting themselves in the world, from the very core of one’s being, but being understood as exceeding the body itself, so that one can adopt many “positions.” Without that life, that spiritual, personal, and essential connection, academic work would have no life; it would be superficial and disconnected. Like papers that cite and re-cite each other, echoing empty phrases that become pure ornament because they have no life outside of themselves, no umbilical cord tying them to their point of reference.21 Guevara’s dream of a better world is always immanent, inspiring many people worldwide to share it in ways adapted to their own times and spaces. Reflectively, Subcomandante Marcos (2004, online) of the Zapatistas writes:
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But what is the speed of a dream I don’t know In our dream, the world is another … with those who always produce riches, and today consume poverty. Our struggle, that is to say, our dream, doesn’t end … The reason that moves us is ethical. In it, the end is in the means.
This is not a conclusion Like much research the end is only another beginning. The artwork is not meant to merely illustrate theory but to be a theoretical exploration in and of itself: both for the artist who is in the process of creation and the viewer whose vision is a dynamic, reflexive, and self-critical moment. I echo Roland Barthes (1975) in saying “I remove myself from Narrative” (18). He defiantly states that this does not define his relations with the objects he observes and studies: the film, the restaurant, the painting. However much I may approach or gesture toward understandings of Guevara’s image, and participate in it, I do not manage to explicate, define or manage my relations with it, nor should I. Approaching the Guerrillero Heroico through collage in recognition of the thousands that have participated in the virtual global collage that Guevara’s image has become pays tribute to, and witnesses, their struggles as well as his. Additionally, the piece as a mobile oppositional form and not subject to the ethno-philosophical limitations of Western rationality plays its own part in the agitation “for a revolutionary consciousness that can intervene in the forces of neocolonizing postmodernism” (Sandoval 2000, 4). Because collage embraces the very limits of figuration, it participates in “the kind of psychic terrain formerly inhabited by the historically decentered citizen-subject; the colonized, the outsider, the queer, the subaltern, the marginalized” (Sandoval 2000, 27). Today’s citizen-subjects may have become “anchorless” but they can still hold a point of reference, as Che Guevara himself did and as many who mobilize and are mobilized by this image do. Therefore, the question is not about what the collage consists of or what it might mean. Rather it is about what it does as a form that brings together ontology and epistemology. Its ways of being and knowing (or onto-epistemologies) are anti-representational (undecidable/unfinished), generative (always becoming), and pedagogically disjunctive.
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Collage provides a unique and powerful tactic befitting Sandoval’s The Methodology of the Oppressed, and embodies the “differential oppositional consciousness” she calls for where “one can depend on no (traditional) mode of belief in one’s own subject position or ideology; nevertheless, such positions and beliefs are called up and utilized in order to constitute whatever forms of subjectivity are necessary to act in an also (now obviously) constituted social world” (2000, 31). Sandoval is careful to note that the differential form of oppositional consciousness “is composed of narrative worked self-consciously. Its processes generate the other story—the counterpoise. Its true mode is nonnarrative: narrative is viewed only as a means to an end—the end of domination” (2000, 63). These three ways of being and knowing, anti-representational (undecidable/ unfinished), generative (always becoming), and pedagogical disjunction, at the core of collage oblige viewers’ (including the artist) into active participation: they are forced to become self-aware of the process of seeing and viewing as performative subjectivity. No single notion of representation can settle in as the image. Compelled to imagine links and relations between disparate sites, viewers become what Nicolas Bourriaud (2005) calls “semionauts” who navigate “new cartologies of knowledge” because: “This recycling of sounds, images, and forms implies incessant navigation within the meanderings of cultural history, navigation which itself becomes the subject [and mode] of artistic practice” (18). But a compass is necessary for this journey because taken alone these three aspects of collage are in danger of permitting “the unhinging of consciousness from its political commitment to the differential mode, permits any oppositional practice to become only another version of dominant ideology, another version of supremacism” (Sandoval 2000, 183). A fourth imperative and indispensable element must be suffused throughout and provide a point of reference. I refer here to that revolutionary love that Che Guevara so famously identified as the quality necessary to guide a true revolutionary. For Sandoval (2000) this “love is understood as affinity” (170). With this compass, “subjectivity becomes freed from ideology as it ties and binds reality … a mixture that lives through differential movement” (Sandoval 2000, 170, original italics). Just as Sandoval’s technologies for the Methodology of the oppressed “comprise a hermeneutic for defining and enacting oppositional social action as a mode of ‘love’ in the postmodern world” (2000, 147), collage ontoepistemology helps ground viewers’ identities differently with this love as their guide. As anti-representational (undecidable/unfinished) collage resists representation. It is always the case that “something could be added or taken away
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without changing the work’s essence” (Brockelman 2001, 30). In this way it is undecidable and unfinished. By being thus always broken and incomplete, it transforms a disadvantage into a new benefit. It responds to actual experiences of deprivation, political powerlessness, and fragmentation but presents the wound, the break, as a place where critical intervention can occur for anyone: it is fundamentally democratic. Kurt Schwitters, recognized as one of the twentieth century’s greatest masters of collage,22 was able to see that: “Everything had broken down and new things had to be made out of the pieces. Collage was like an image of the revolution within me—not as it was but as it might have been” (Dietrich 1993, 6–7). His revolution is motivated by the kind of hermeneutic of love Guevara spoke of, one that envisions another world and its possibilities. Brockelman (2001) also detects that, “Schwitters’ … conviction that the purpose of collage is not to represent the nature of capitalist phantasmagoria to the viewer … rather to transform … to [be] an active participant in it” (47) and reinforces the anti-representational bent at the root of its being. In refusing to represent any kind of illusory wholeness, collage unmasks the constructed nature of narrative, discourse, and other representational forms. Do any articles or essays exist that are not in reality full of cut and paste, whether of edits or of citations? Many of our thoughts are unfinished before our minds bound to the next idea; simply put, linearity is not natural, in fact it is a lie: Sigmund Freud famously concluded that, “Consecutive presentation is not a very adequate means of describing complicated mental processes going on in different layers of the mind.” Yet the scars are smoothed over so that there is “flow” and “clarity” lest the reader be confused. Writers such as Homi Bhabha and Jacques Derrida worked against the flow/clarity paradigm and interrupted and frustrated readers instead because they were concerned with disturbing the very ideologies embedded in the form of narrative itself. For this same reason Sandoval (2000) endorses a “dialectical movement of subjectivity that disallows, yes—but at the same time allows—individual expression, style, and personality” (35). She conceives that another level of tactical and strategic conversion is necessary. In the case of collage, Beyers (n.d.) describes the critical shift that occurs in Picasso’s Glass and a Bottle: In “reality” when you hold a bottle of Suze, you consider the liqueur the “real” part. The label is the representational part. But in Picasso’s collage, the bottle is painted in a particularly flat way, eschewing the painterly illusion of depth, while the label is real. Thus the collage can be interpreted as showing the constructed nature of reality and the materiality of representation. For this reason, Rosalind
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Krauss argues that collage challenges “any simplistic idea of reference” and “effects the representation of representation (37).” (Beyers 2004, 3)
This is how the form challenges simplistic ideas of reference and reveals a certain self-consciousness regarding representation (Beyers 2004, 3). But collage resists in multiple ways, which serve to enhance its efficacy as a form, and so I turn to the second essential onto-epistemological trait of generativity. In ‘Collagemachine,’ Kerne (2001, online) tells us that: “The findings of creative cognition research indicate that the methods of semiotic collage artists promote emergence and creativity both for the artist and for the audience.” Collage is always becoming because it provides multiple interpretive paths for the viewer’s eyes to follow and one may easily see the same work as completely different on another occasion. Often the artist will show preference for one of these paths, but there is no way to compromise the heterogeneity guaranteed by the very form of collage. Thus it may imply “that there is a conceptual space for truth but only to the extent that it validates the proposition ‘there is no truth’ ” but this space of truth “is itself a generated space” (Brockelman 2001, 54). In the cross-currents of the temporal unfolding of collage, hybrids form and provoke new ways of interpreting information. The generative trait of collage, like the quality of undecideability ensures resistance to representation because it provides a riddle rather than a clear relationship, it is a piece of newspaper as-if a table, but instead of choosing one or the other it oscillates between them. Like Barthes (1975), it rejects the “so-called ‘healthy subject’ that lives in the dominant ‘either/or’ alternative by saying, ‘I have no hope, but all the same …’ or ‘I stubbornly choose not to choose, I choose drifting: I continue’ ” (62). How can all this fragmentation be coherent enough at any one moment to permit action? Collage helps us recall that fragmentation is not an experience or a notion specific to an age or era. Just the opposite is true: “The scapegoated, marginalized, enslaved and colonized of every community have also experienced and theorized this shattering, this splitting of signifieds from their signifiers” (Sandoval 2000, 35). The gap provides the only uncolonized space, but it cannot be inhabited, only evoked and passed through, and it can serve as a punctum. Drawing on Elizabeth Ellsworth (1997), Garoian and Gaudelius (2008) underline “the disassociation afforded by the disjunctive narrative of collage” as a pedagogical necessity in fostering critical thinking. Like Ellsworth, they argue that collage’s modes of address resist quick and easy conclusions. The discontinuity of their differing images and ideas prefers an “analytic dialogue” versus a “communicative” one.23 The oscillating, slippery and unpredictable
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characteristics of analytic dialogue allow for diverse perspectives and unlimited creative possibilities unlike communicative dialog, which pushes resolution out of a need to pin down meaning. They also cite a wall text (worth repeating) at Interventionist Collage: From Dada to the present (2005) curated by Rudolf Kuenzli who observes (2011) that the creative critical and political dimensions of collage as well as the intellectual work of the artists: Newspapers were the ubiquitous mouthpiece[s] of ideological representations through the century, but for artists armed with scissors and paste, the ideologies they embodied and disseminated could be literally cut up, rearranged, and thus transformed. Similarly magazines, magnetic tape, vinyl albums, and film footage could be subjected to hands-on manipulations. Through these transgressive and critical manipulations of mass media, the collagist turns from being a consumer of mass media into a creative producer. Collage has proven to be a potentially powerful strategy for intervening in media representation of reality, since it uses socially coded representations and returns them in the form of a new critical contextualization. (Garoian and Gaudelius 2008, 103)
The ethic guiding the onto-epistemological process behind any hermeneutic of collage’s properties of being anti-representational (undecidable/unfinished), generative (always becoming) and pedagogical disjunction is the elective affinity of love. Sandoval (2000) writes that “love as social movement is enacted by revolutionary, mobile, and global coalitions of citizen-activists who are allied through the apparatus of emancipation” (184). Similarly, though they may not have expressed it to themselves in that manner, those choosing to use the image of Che Guevara participate in a global collage are also coalescing via this kind of love. And it is in the acting, marching, or being interpellated by this image that the image shows itself and the consciousness of the so-called subject is transformed in a way that can only be described as alchemical. They “realize their subjection to power (that people are the words the social order speaks). The radical form of cognitive mapping that differential consciousness allows, develops such knowledge into a method by which the limits of the social order can be spoken, named, and made translucent: the body passes through and is transformed” (Sandoval 2000, 36). The image of Che brings a point of reference from which to theorize resistance into focus. The chemical, alchemical transformation of the alchemist by his/her practice, renews his/her mind and spirit … Elective alchemies … A resurrection is a re-birth, a re-naissance, or re-appearance. Although it is new, it is also the same. When ancient philosophers spoke of gold and silver, that the work of
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the alchemist was supposed to render from lead, it may have been an allegory for the practice of Alchemy altering the mind and spirit of the alchemist. It is changed yet consistent: a transfiguration. The new body is immortal and agile. This transfigured “body” is a body that is not a body. Perhaps it shows itself somehow to an open consciousness. Still, that which shows itself24 can also hide itself, and dynamically flicker between visibility and invisibility, transparency and opacity, legibility and indecipherability. Again turning to Sandoval (2000) is constructive: This “open door” of consciousness is a place of crossing, of transition and metamorphosis. At this threshold, meanings are recovered and dispersed through another rhetoric that transfigures all others, and whose movement is its nature … the consciousness it requires reads the variables of meaning, apprehending and caressing their differences; it shuffles their (continual) rearrangement, while its own parameters queerly shift according to necessity, ethical positioning, and power. (131)
As imminent revolutionary love can function as the point of reference indicated by the Guerrillero Heroico, critical collage has the potential to enhance a navigational agility that can ensure the survival of the oppressed through “the ability to perceive and decode dominant-order sign systems in order to move among them” (Sandoval 2000, 183). All those people participating in the ever-expanding global collage of the Guerrillero Heroico provide an answer to Foucault’s call, echoed by Sandoval and many others, for ways to “generate access to politically revolutionary love, desire and resistance … undo fascism by grounding identity differently … [and develop] anti-colonial oppositional consciousness and praxis (xiii)” (Foucault in Sandoval 2000, 165). To do this we must be open to discarding institutionalized research maps, finding critical points of reference, and embarking on journeys to places of connection that, as Melville’s (1851) Captain Ahab says, are “not down in any map; true places never are” (Chapter 12).
Soundscape My personal journey underwrites and haunts every word written here, I do not manage to codify or separate it according to Eurocentric norms and strip my work of my individual identity. Following Graveline (2000) and others, meaning is not separate from the processes engaged in by the self, it is neither inside nor
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outside. To declare ‘what I know to be True’ is a complex undertaking” (162). Therefore I use soundscape to describe a presence that both contributes to the emergent research design and is generated out of the same process, in order to fit the immersive nature of the impact of the ecology of personal experiences. My connection to Guevara’s story and that of his image is rooted in my own Argentineness and crisis of exile. I resonate with Che’s Argentinisms, as well as his nomadism (and that of the Guerrillero Heroico). Guevara’s nomadism is typical of that of many Argentines abroad: agile adapters to so many other cultural contexts, and yet retaining something of the rootless about them. His efforts to spread the anti-imperialist revolution and to assist people’s struggle for freedom anywhere and in any way are underpinned by the themes of overcoming and of sacrifice in his life. He was not so much rebellious, as willing to make whatever sacrifice was demanded of him. None of his many detractors deny that he was a man whose actions and words were congruent; a rare quality. Guevara was famous for never lying; if he said he would do something, he did it. When he instituted volunteer Sundays in Cuba, he participated and logged hundreds of hours harvesting sugarcane with a machete. Not only was he a man of action, but a philosopher and innovative thinker. He is a unique example of someone who, having power and a ministerial position, released it in order to pursue a project bigger than himself. In his case, the power of love was not subsumed by the love of power.
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About Face
Figure 7.1: Image by Carlos Latuff (Wikimedia Commons) https://commons. wikimedia.org/wiki/File:CheTunisiaLatuff.gif
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Do images of a particular kind simply become accidentally, virally, or randomly replicated, or is there some sort of agency in the way they are invoked or taken up which performs relations that might be characterized as bearing witness? A sympathetic engagement provokes the sharing of images through something akin to Donna Haraway’s notion of a “ ‘modest witness’ to describe the activity of critical thinking … . Haraway (1997) offers the notion of modest as a form of accountability, open-ended dialogue and critical thinking” (Braidotti 2006, 200). Can visual attestation through significant images be understood as a manifestation of critical thinking through an imaginative consciousness? While situated and partial forms of knowledges, for philosopher Rosi Braidotti (2006), place relations over substances and rightly rely on process ontology to do so, she centers the operation on “the rejection of a semiotic method of approach” (200). At the same time, in fact on the same page, she calls for “new forms of literacy to decode today’s world” and claims: “Figurations also entail a discursive ethics” (200). Both concerns she mentions are ones that the semiotic methods of today are precisely attending to. Charged with empathy and affinity, “The ‘modest witness’ is neither detached not uncaring, but a border-crossing figure who attempts to recontextualize his/her own practice within fast-changing social horizons” (Braidotti 2006, 200). What if the bearing of an image in protest is just this kind of re-locative iteration so that the individual’s modest witnessing is borne somehow by the meanings accrued to the image in that particular situation? If so, can art in “drawing energy from the thinkability of the future” (Braidotti 2006, 207) change the world by bearing witness?
Before and Beyond the “Viral” Before the emergence of the so-called phenomenon of the “viral image” there was the Guerrillero Heroico, and it continues to spread both online and on the global street. Why does it multiply so relentlessly? Despite being from another geopolitical time and space, derivative versions of this image of Che Guevara’s face populated many of the Arab uprisings in 2011. Erupting in multiple media forms such as graffiti, flags, tattoos, posters and online avatars, t-shirts, and cartoons across the nations of Tunisia, Libya, Yemen, Bahrain, Egypt, and Syria, to the earlier instances of its use in Algeria, Lebanon, Morocco, Palestine, and Israel and in the 2009 Green Revolution in Iran, this face was present. Can it be described as “viral” though? The term “viral image” appears frequently in popular discourses, yet no definition for a viral image has been arrived at by
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scholars or otherwise. At what point exactly can a phenomenon be characterized as viral? What is the speed of multiplication and sharing required? Still, most regular Internet users will understand the expression does not refer to using an electron microscope for the identification of gastrointestinal growths. Neither multiple database searches nor the popular online encyclopedia, Wikipedia, yield an entry for “viral image.” The vague rambling definition on Urban Dictionary.com, describes it as an “image posted on a social networking site that gets shared and reposted by many people.” Related terms such as viral marketing and viral video may hint at possible ways to understand the concept. Marketing understood as “viral” primarily describes a way of advertising that parasitically and opportunistically uses existing social networks to spread messages. Viral videos generally are characterized as becoming popular on the Internet through sharing primarily via social media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter, and are said to usually contain humorous content as a key ingredient in promoting their share-ability. Some key examples contradict the requirement for humor. A particularly notable one being the Kony 2012 campaign by the non-profit group Invisible Children with over 34,000,000 views on the first day of its Internet upload on March 5, 2012 and eventually surpassing 100 million views (Flock 2012, online). The number of people viewing a video, or image, functions as an indicator to qualify a video as “viral” and yet no general agreement exists on how many views are needed or over what period of time they need to be accumulated. One social media blog sets it at “more than 5 million views in a 3–7 day period” (O’Neill 2011, online). Generally, an image is successfully “viral” when it spreads widely and rapidly through World Wide Web to the point where it creates a kind of splash in endlessly proliferating image-scapes crossing all kinds of languages, and geopolitical and social boundaries. What is notable about the expression “viral image” besides the lack of a definition, which is interesting in and of itself, is that for the first time images are being described or categorized not according to what they might depict, or how, but by the process by which they multiply or the quality of their perceived/ received shareability. Viral images can be landscapes, portraits, documentary, fictional, photographs, or cartoons: there are no limits or requirements on what or how something is depicted. There are also no requirements for the modalities or media that bear these images. While predominantly spreading through the Internet, a photograph can depict a t-shirt that contains another image of a graffito drawing of yet another photograph and so on in intermediated and multimedia infusions. Additionally, the Internet is not absolutely
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necessary because images can consist of drawings copying posters, or graffiti depicting photographs that are then rendered as posters and copied by hand, or re-rendered as tattoos all deriving to some degree from a matrix image and dispersing fractally. The notion of a viral image exceeds all pre-existing classificatory modes. The adjective “viral” allows for the mutation and transgredience of images: they can be altered, re-mixed, mashed up, fragmented, re-contextualized, and re-purposed in limitless ways. In fact the more an image is playfully altered, the more fertile it becomes as it opens itself to multiple tributaries of visual commentary. It is still implicitly understood as a consistent image of something that, despite its inherent multiplicity, is not diluted. Like an utterance for Bakhtin (1923/1990, 22) there is always excess given off of an image. And yet the use of a word like “virus” to describe (images, videos, and so on) spreading indicates that, although for most people the mechanism for spreading is through sharing (like gossip), they actually do not know why certain images spread more than others or even really what makes something worth spreading. Well before the invention of the Internet, derivatives of the Guerrillero Heroico were multiplying worldwide, not in a consistent linear way but in ebbs and flows and spurts. It would be tempting to describe it as a pre-digital viral image, but ultimately unsatisfying because such a portrayal would limit conceptual space for identifying individual agency. The notion of being viral carries with it a kind of helplessness as if one simply cannot help or comprehend the spreadability or shareability of this matrix image and the possibility of action is shut down. It would be a shoulder-shrug response to the question of what might fuel an individual’s desire to re-render, carry, copy, appropriate, adapt or somehow work with this face. The storied expression on Guevara’s face in this photograph continues to grip imaginations and provoke responses.
Not viral but virile? The Guerrillero Heroico image is more than what can be described as viral, it has a generative potency and, as I will ultimately propose in this chapter, it bears witness. The political functions of cultural and discursive systems through which graphic images and gestures are appraised, interpreted, and given significance participate in how the images/gestures come to “construct” meaning and in how such meanings accrue importance and stick to an image. As philosopher Karen Barad (2003) reminds us: “Discourse is not what is said; it is that which
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constrains and enables what can be said” (819). In considering the simultaneous material and social nature of both vision and presentation, and how “the fleeting temporality of the gaze as a site of ethical possibility offers several important leads for how to rethink the place of visual technologies – and visual perception” (Poole 2005, 172), I will explore how ethical possibilities are made possible through visualizations. Taking the example of the 2011 Arab Spring, I am concerned with how images of Che Guevara’s face served to mark the difficult affects of conflict. And so I ask again: “Can art change the world?” In the context of civic media and creative youth activism in the Middle East this image actively participates in the visual vernacular. Often the mobilization of the famous iconic image of Che Guevara surges wherever and whenever people protest publicly. The eruptions of revolts across North Africa and the Middle East are no exception, and have also seen a parallel explosion of this image’s presence on the visual plane of the Arab street. Alfred Gell’s (1998) radical notions of the distributed agency of artistic artifice as an aesthetic and intentional sign, combined with current ideas on the virtual, can perhaps afford a more nuanced way to understand geopolitical visual practices—especially when mobilized from the grassroots. I also theorize the relation between a responsive viewer and the image as one of bearing witness through a process of immanence-emanation. Witnessing means not only that one can confirm or testify to an experience, but also that one’s self actually constitutes proof. It is embodied pedagogy. Finally, I will also consider the significance of the face as a phenomenon. If for Levinas, “the face of the other at each moment destroys and overflows the plastic image it leaves me” (1979, 43, 50–1) can we ask: Is this kind of experience also possible through an image? Similarly Derrida concludes, “the face is not in the world because it breaches and exceeds totality” (1978, 134). What is a face? Is it merely accidental that some of the most famous and most widely reproduced images are human faces?
Guerrilla Artfare: From defacement to enfacement Visual moments of traction: with the image of the Nakba commemorations in 2008 (Figure 7.2), the photographer sent me a note that read “Two of the guys are wearing Nakba T-shirts with 1948 on the back. The third is wearing a Che shirt. I saw that quite a bit yesterday (lots of Che shirts).” In 2009, this photograph (Fig. 7.3) of a Mousavi supporter in Iran created waves on the Internet.
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Figure 7.2: Nakba commemorations 2008 (Amber Hussain)
His resolute face and defiantly rolled up sleeve revealing an image of the “infidel” Che Guevara: being seen wearing it whether on a t-shirt or by carrying a poster, in the 1980s, had been a punishable offence. Years later, Isobel Coleman of the Huffington Post reported from Yemen on January 20, 2011: “Hundreds of demonstrators gather at the university [Sanaa] gates each morning, holding placards of Che Guevara and chanting slogans like ‘Where is our loaf of bread?’ and ‘No studies, no teaching until the president is out’ ” (online). From T’Kout (Wilaya de Batna) in Northern Algeria to Tunisia and Palestine walls bear diverse spray paint renderings of this portrait (figures 7.4 and 7.5). In response to a conference presenter’s assertion that “we all know art does not and/or cannot change the world,” I once asked, “How can one know that art doesn’t change the world?” After all, what would the world be without art? Imagine a world with not only no painting, but no literature, no drama or comedy, no fashion, no tattoos, no elaborate carnival floats, no totem poles, no architecture beyond the most functional so churches to sand castles are out, no music, no flower arrangements, no poetry, no monuments or statues or carvings, and so on. Does not art’s very presence change the world not only visually but also in terms of what and how it is permissible to think the possible? With the intention of engaging the discursive and thematic multiplicity of the
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Figure 7.3: The Green Che (wikimedia commons 21 June 2009) by Hamed Saber
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Figure 7.4: Place 13 mai (flickr.com Creative Commons)
Figure 7.5: Tunisia 2905 (Dennis Jarvis: flickr.com Creative Commons)
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Figure 7.6: Bethlehem (Creap: flickr.com Creative Commons)
diverse renderings of this famous 1960 photograph taken by Alberto Korda in Cuba, I will trace some of the appearances of this image in the case of the Arab Spring. A saying attributed to poet and playwright Bertold Brecht reads, “Art is not a mirror to reflect reality, but a hammer to give it form.” That is, art actively shapes our world rather than simply showing it to us. Artistic images, whether rendered perfectly or imperfectly by professional artists or amateurs are socially reinvented when necessary whether politically or culturally. They take on new conceptual and functional roles that can sometimes be seen as agentic in that they authorize and motivate social actors in turn. To tease out the ways images behave as-if actors themselves, the notion of representation as traditionally formulated no longer satisfies the fluid range of kinetic as well as mimetic and multi-directional roles of the image. Representation then, must be understood as being something that exceeds the mere standing for other people, places, things or ideas. Again, Preziosi’s (2003) notion of artifice as “the locus of working on memory and meaning as processes of adequation” (147) is useful because it asks us to see artworks not as representations but rather as questions soliciting our engagement pedagogically (147).
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I would like to propose that when a viewer recognizes the virtual (and invisible) qualities of visible image (of Che Guevara in this case), the possibility of the agency of the art or artifact is actualized, and thereby the efficacy of the virtual is made apparent, and by extension the prospect of bearing witness. I am going to develop this notion by looking at how the image of Che Guevara has mobilized in Egypt and beyond, primarily during a repressive dictatorship. I will also link artifice with the virtual to show how the virtual is efficacious in allowing an image to become a social agent. As mentioned in a previous chapter Gell notes how most literature about art does not give adequate attention to its performative and agentic aspects. Recalling Gell’s definition of art as “a system of action, intended to change the world” (6) the emphasis is clearly on “agency, intention, causation, result and transformation” (my emphasis, 6) rather than mere symbolic communication. To ground his theory, Gell uniquely expands the notion of index far beyond traditional semiotics by re-framing the notion of cause. He posits that an artist is the “cause” of a work of art in the same way as fire is (usually) the cause of smoke. Gell’s technique is limited by his failure to address intention in his expanded approach to index as the key difference in how “cause” comes to be vis-à-vis the traditional formulation. His work, while very creatively nuancing the notion of index in various ways, has been much criticized (Rampley 2005) and has been overly neglected especially outside anthropology as a result. The intention is key to the notion of artifice because, to put it in traditional semiotic terms, the similarity or link between signified and signifier is an imputed one. In other words, the sign is operating primarily on the plane of the virtual or that which is actual but not concrete.
Saving face: Tributaries of the image As intimated in the previous section, my initial digital ethnographic attempts confirmed the popularity of Guevara’s image in North Africa and the Arab world quickly revealing varied references to and images of the revolutionary. As I followed the news on the Arab Spring through various media sources, including social media platforms and reports from friends and family January through March, I began to notice the prevalence of Guevara’s presence in the social imaginary in the Arab world. One of the social media platforms notably marked by this image was Twitter, where many people changed their avatars to Che faces.
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Figure 7.7: Screenshots of avatars (Carolina Cambre)
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While, repetition of images was common, this small sample of ten different renderings shows some of the diversity presenting itself. Changing one’s avatar to the image of Che is a way of becoming Che or of entering into the image. Taken from the Hindu word expressing the manifestation of a Hindu deity in human, superhuman, or animal form, (descent (ava) and tariti (crossing)) the reverse happens in the online world. Instead of incarnation, or embodiment, there is a disembodiment that allows people to “be seen as” a particular avatar. In a sense, one is writing and expressing thoughts as-if one is/is in/speaks through the image. Writing on the case of Khaled Mohamed Saeed, (the Alexandrian youth who died as a result of a brutally beating Egyptian police that sparked mass protests), curator Sophie J. Williamson (2012) recalls how Guy Debord, writing in the context of the May 1968 protests in Paris, saw how the “distributed posters depicting simple yet striking iconography played a major role in uniting workers” (7). She compares that context to the “so called Arab Spring” where the use of “iconic posters has continued to play a part … and new networks have emerged … Moreover,” she adds, “the image is at the heart of political dynamics in the Middle East” (7). Interestingly, the May 1968 protests of Paris and the uprisings of the Arab Spring actually share a very prominent image, the Guerrillero Heroico, linking them across time and space. If it is the case that: The viral image is outside the scope of the law so it facilitates the construction of anonymous global networks and a shared history that political institutions are incapable of regulating. As the image travels it builds alliances, provoking translation or new readings, and in doing so creates new publics and debates. (Williamson 2012, 9)
What kinds of conclusions, then, if any, can be drawn about the work of Guevara’s image in the Maghreb and beyond? Can we understand it as indicating somehow the idea that artefacts “en masse are part of our joint intelligence” and not only “channel human productive action, they also attune the senses and the emotions, becoming part of the human ‘extended mind’ ” (Gosden 2013, 40, 43) and that this image has been operating in its own kind of cultural or historical art production system being broken up and recombined in multiple ways throughout its own history. Here, it is worth filling in a little more context historically. For example, Guevara as a figure is recalled often in Palestine, and at times even referred to as Palestinian. The memory of his historic visit is depicted in the photo of Che Guevara visiting Gaza on June 18, 1959. He visited several
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Palestinian refugee camps, where he was welcomed with chants of the Cuban revolution. The memories of these events continue to be reiterated through images circulated through social media networks such as Facebook. Cuba had also welcomed the founding of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), making official contact with it in 1965. Thus not only the t-shirts proliferate, but also his books, countless memorial songs translated from Spanish to Arabic in acts of remembrance, and individuals show their admiration by naming their children after him. Figure 7.9 shows a little girl with one of Guevara’s diaries and while the picture seems posed, it serves to present her as a revolutionary in training. There is only muddy chaos in the background and she is seated on a rock, yet she is reading with apparent focus. In the first 20 minutes after this image was posted it was shared 42 times and given the “thumbs-up” or “liked” 77 times. In videos one also finds the image in action as depicted in the still below where a Palestinian youth is facing Israeli military officers. Images too numerous to track and collect continue to visually link Guevara and Palestine. It should be noted here that the image is also pressed into service in Israel proper as figure 7.11 from Tel Aviv reveals. In Egypt, Che Guevara was memorialized in diverse art forms from Omar Sharif playing Che in the early seventies film about his life, to local theater
Figure 7.8: Tehran Protests (screenshot of video still by C. Cambre, 2011)
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Figure 7.9: Screenshot of Palestinian girl (Facebook)
Figure 7.10: Guevara in Gaza screenshot by M.C. Cambre
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Figure 7.11: Photo by Yossi Gurvitz, September 1, 2011 Tel Aviv
representations, and popular film and image montages creating visual parallels between Guevara and other leaders seen to have confronted Western imperialism. And again innumerable songs were dedicated to him. In particular, Egyptians remember not only Guevara’s state visit as head of a Cuban delegation with larger-than-life nationalist President Nasser in 1965, but also his taking time to visit with Egyptian farmers. The 1965 photograph of Guevara with Egyptian farmers (figure 7.13) has an un-staged quality and an authenticity in the grain and the expressions of the figures. They seem not only festive, and close to Guevara. They are all massed together at the bottom of the frame, Guevara with his arm around one man and another’s hand on his shoulder. The usual distance seen in photographs with dignitaries is completely absent here. Could we imagine foreign representatives being welcomed this way in North Africa today? In line with the nationalistic tone of the associations with Nasser, images mashed up with Guevara’s face with that of King Tutankhamun have him virtually merging into the Egyptian royal family. This image was so popular, as graffiti and online copies proliferated, that it was soon featured on a t-shirt. A new social and political imaginary surfaces here, “images serve as the thread of thought, entangling expectation with experience in ways that root agency not
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Figure 7.12: Egyptian visit with Nasser (Wikimedia Commons)
in action but in imagination” (Küchler 2013, 26). As an artifact, this mashed up version of transparently displays “processes and transformation in ways that allow for a rethinking of objectification” (30). With this artwork (figure 7.14), viewers are presented with the visible experience of relations between King Tut and Che that cannot adequately be expressed through language and exceed the ways in which one might describe the experience of viewing and being somehow attracted by the image on this shirt. It could be described as the kind of intuitive knowing from acts of imagination and visualization that “Bateson called ‘the bonus of understanding’ to be derived from a combination of two different realms of data: one visible, the other invisible, and calibrated to provoke abductions that come to be formative about these data thereafter (Bateson 1980, 76; see also Greenwood 2005, 95).”
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Figure 7.13: Che with Egyptian farmers (Wikimedia Commons)
This knowledge, Küchler (2013) continues, “is not domesticated, and thus not readily possessed corporate institutions, while binding persons to one another more effectively than contracts (Halbert 2005; Tenner 1996)” (32). Still, it is a big step from celebration and memorialization in the world of art and culture, to taking up the image on the streets in revolt, however this is exactly what was seen throughout the Arab uprisings. There it was, the Guerrillero Heroico looking on from posters, t-shirts, Twitter icons, flags, and other media. So, what was the image doing with these people and what were these people doing with the image? If we follow Küchler’s (2013) understanding of how Alfred Gell’s “cognitive stickiness” works, we can understand that the prototype is resembled in translation while performing larger “connections between things and people via thing present and intuitively indicative of complex intentionality” (36) or a kind of elective affinity.
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Figure 7.14: King Tut Che (screenshot from Al Jazeera web page 2011)
Generally, I posit that it can be seen as the kind of call for change that begins when those oppressed under harsh or suffocating regimes lift their eyes from the ground and see the horizon. Once one becomes conscious of that horizon, and the possibility of change, a return to how they saw the world before becomes possible. For example, Paul Wilson (2011) of The Walrus Journal writes, “In Cairo … the revolution unlocked in people a sense of self-worth and confidence that had long been suppressed. Typically, they describe the experience as a sudden release of energy” (online). Wilson continues to relate the case of Nagham Osman, a young film student in Cairo at the time, who tells him about the years of fear paralyzing all those she knew; insisting this time is one of renewal and rebirth: “I don’t want to sleep. I wake up at five o’clock in the morning. I’ve just turned thirty, and it’s a very nice birthday” (Wilson 2011, online). Reflecting on her loss of fear and changed behavior, she recounts how she even “surprised herself by standing up to authority figures in a way she had never dared before”
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Figure 7.15: King Tut and Che t-shirt (Screenshot by C. Cambre)
(Wilson 2011, online). Wilson concludes, “After almost half a century during which the idea of active citizenship had been discouraged, this modest uptick in the desire to participate offered some encouragement” (2011, online). Terry Eagleton (2009) notes that “a transformation in our language games generally reflects an upheaval in material forms of life” therefore radical changes in representations … connect to … our lived experience of the world” (82). If, as discussed in Chapter 5 with respect to East Timor, each iteration of Che Guevara’s face taken from the Korda photo can be seen as a spin-off, and “renderings” of things are considered material parts of things like limbs, “then the kind of leverage which one obtains over a person or thing by having access to their image is comparable to the leverage which can be obtained by having access to some physical part of them” (Gell 1998, 105). This kind of belief would explain many of the attacks on art works representing historical figures, such as
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Figure 7.16: Egyptian protester with flag (twitter feed)
the toppling of statues. While some might frame this as an instance of mimesis as illustrated by the anthropologist Michael Taussig (1993) where it operates through a two-stage process of contact and copy, I would hesitate to leave it in the context of the compulsion only to gain power over, or to imitate through a copy. In the case of the Guevara image, more than the acquisition of leverage over a thing is happening because, as we see in these examples, people are creating or evoking the prototype as part of a process of becoming and acting with rather than on the original. It is as if these people feel Che Guevara is really with them. Aesthetic theories of mimesis as elaborated by Shierry Weber Nicholsen (1997) based on the thought of Theodore Adorno (1997), Walter Benjamin (1978), and Susan Buck-Morss (1977, 1989) see the possibility of mimesis functioning as “a means to connect with” and or “be transformed by the power and order inherent in the other” (Nicholsen 1997, 57). By situating the relationships of affinity that manifest themselves through action and imitation, but also conceptually on the level of ideas, as Maussian types of the distributed self, Gell is making a very specific claim about the sympathethic, non-coercive and most importantly multidirectional nature of these relationships.
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Art of witnessing The question remains, in what ways artistic works can be said to bear witness to the difficult aspects of conflict: what are the characteristic features of their participation? In the case of Che Guevara’s image in the Middle East and across
Figure 7.17: Otto Schade Graffiti London (photo by Matt Brown 2010)
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North Africa, during the resistance, the images were pressed into service as visual interventions. However the images did much more than this, they also modeled disobedience. Simply by existing in the face of such tyranny, these images enacted a refusal to be subjected and therein not only authorized (simply by existing) the disobedience of others, but also indicated possible ways to disobey the dictates of the regime and worked toward the liberating of the imagination. The role of such images is thus to interfere, meddle, and sow the seeds of discontent: under authoritarianism agitation is absolutely necessary. Without agitation there would be no change. The act of recognizing the way the artwork is acting subversively occurs on the level of consciousness. The art-consciousness connection is a kind of witnessing, that in “making visible” gives testimony and thus enacts a kind of epistemic disobedience (Mignolo 2009): or a using and therefore validating of other knowledges outside of the dominant narratives grounded in unquestioned existing power relationships. Because in these cases artworks are modeling what is possible for viewers to do or now consciously refuse to do (accept censorship for example), they call on a viewer to look inward and ask, “where am I, what is my responsibility?” The link between art, reflexivity (consciousness) and testimony (making visible) returns us to Frantz Fanon’s epistemic foundational statement in Black Skin, White Masks (1967 [1952]) where he writes: “The Negro of the Antilles will be proportionally whiter – that is, he will come closer to being a real human being – in direct ratio to his mastery of the French language” (17–18). Fanon is referring to a particular awareness of the mechanisms and degrees of silence and silencing. Through artifice, these artworks have been able to present another story by being able to master the “language” or disciplinary norms and appear to perform within the loci of those hegemonic disciplines and institutions (enunciations) while at the same time presenting an otherwise. If the viewer is a responsive one, the relationship calls on him/her also to bear witness to the silencing that results from such epistemic privileging. The literature on testimony and bearing witness is vast and explored in great depth in various fields, primarily the juridical and the theological. And still, as feminist theologian Lucy Tatman (1997) points out, “ ‘us’ academictypes haven’t been able to squeeze the life out of ‘bearing witness’ yet” (92). In early Greco-Roman and Rabbinic traditions, eyewitnesses were as much interpreters as observers (Bauckham 2003). In other words, witnessing is seen as an embodied event where one is implicated in the act of giving testimony as interpretation of an event in one’s own words as the moment where one now is
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responsible for the trust of those hearing the story. To this end the etymological root of the word “witness” as a literal translation of the Greek martys (c.1300) or martyr, places the body at the centre of the testimony so that in testifying, or attesting to a fact from personal knowledge, one becomes the physical embodiment of that knowledge. As Roger Simon (1997) states, “witnessing also implies the acceptance of very particular obligations” (177). Simon goes only as far as framing witnessing as a “transactional responsibility … [in] a chain of possible transactional relations” (177–8). Crucially, what he fails to acknowledge is its transformational impact in that the witness cannot un-see what has been seen, or un-learn what has been learned through the experience. This is an embodied pedagogical experience that goes beyond apprehending an event or a “communicative act which re-cites and re-sites what one has learned” (Simon et al. 2000, 298). Because the witness must make sense of, interpret and come to an judgement about what has been seen or heard, it is insufficient to place the testimony in the realm of citation where “what is given, is given again” (Simon et al. 2000, 299). Even if “memoration [sic] or quotation is not simply repetition, but an iterative re-working” (299), the fact of the bearer being irrevocably changed is still absent as is the future orientation of the testimony which is given in order to do justice. Testimony is an “immanent demand for justice” (Tatman 1997, 96). More than being a mere bystander a witness only becomes such at the moment of recognizing one’s own self as proof or evidence of something or someone. A witness responds to the call of the Other (person/event). Thus, “true learning consists in receiving the lesson so deeply that it becomes a necessity to give oneself to the other. The lesson of truth is not held in one … consciousness. It explodes toward the other” (Levinas 1994, 80). Becoming a witness means not only that one can confirm or testify to an experience, but also that one’s self actually constitutes proof. The witness cannot claim to be removed, objectively pointing to the evidence. What the witness believes to be true is a part of the evidence. Additionally, not any story told counts as testimony, Tatman is worth quoting at length here: Bearing witness is not concerned with spiritual hygiene or individual exaltation; it is concerned with communal living, with ensuring that living communities can go on living. The story told by the multi-national corporation justifying the razing of a village will have nothing to do with bearing witness. The story told by one of the surviving villagers, that story will be a testimony worth hearing. One story will be about profit the other might just be prophetic. But it seems to me that in order to hear it as prophecy one has to hear in the single voice of the
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speaker the voices of the dead, the voices of the children and the silenced, the voices of all those who know precisely what has happened but who cannot speak themselves. One has to hear those who are not allowed to speak a word. (99)
One can only become proof by fulfilling the responsibility to testify, vouch for or attest to that which one has witnessed. In other words, one cannot become witness without bearing witness. This pedagogical process is transformative and can be understood as having the character of immanence-emanation. First it is an internal process or incubation; then there must be some kind of internal movement. But for the transformation to be actualized one must give testimony, become evidence or emanate. Such a transformation necessarily carries new awareness, sense of self, and actions with it as well as a biographical configuration in processes of knowing and understanding that allows the knower (witness) to revisit the terms of what is knowable (Mignolo 2009). Generally Paul Ricoeur, who developed the concept of testimony over a period of 30 plus years, saw testimony as something not merely a matter of words but rather as a demand for total engagement of speech and action: one can state that the whole being of the witness is bound up in the testimony. Because I focus on the social context of image production, circulation, and reception as part of the nexus of social relations, in certain contexts, images not only substitute for persons and thus mediate social agency but also perform and authorize certain subject positions. In these ways, the use of images is already action in the social sphere. A second phase is therefore necessary: one can understand that those who carry or create reproductions of this image, Guevara’s face, are not only showing it, being seen with it, but also interacting with the image itself—having Guevara see them (acting under the gaze, reciprocal, or at least multidirectional). The individual’s conscious internal movement is manifested as aesthetic testimony, becomes evidence, emanates in turn, via the outward expression of this alchemical change. Such a transformation necessarily carries new awareness, sense of self and actions with it. It is pedagogy in motion. And so I ask you, does art change the world?
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8
The Unfinished Business of the Guerrillero Heroico: Queering Che
Many different places have “their” Che Guevara. Thomas Sankara, former president of Burkina Faso, was assassinated in a coup d’état in October 1987. He had observed that his people’s struggle for independence and well-being was called insubordination, while those that looted the nation’s wealth were supposedly doing “civilizing work.” He noted, “That is how they will write history, and that is how most of humanity will learn it. That is why I prefer to feel Che Guevara at my side before any of them” (Erquizia 2007 online, my translation). Sankara is known to many as the Black Che. In Turkey, Deniz Gezmis the young leftist leader and one of the founding members of the People’s Liberation Army of Turkey (THKO) was able to call out “Long live an independent Turkey! Long live Marxism–Leninism! Long live the brotherhood between the Turkish and Kurdish peoples! Long live the workers and peasants! Out with imperialism!” (Mourenza n.d., online, my translation) before kicking his own chair out from under his feet in his public execution by hanging. Today he is remembered as the Turkish Che. In Puerto Rico, Filiberto Ojeda Ríos led the clandestine guerrilla group Los Macheteros for over 30 years, in a struggle for independence from the U.S.A. In 1999, at the age of 72 when his remaining activities centered largely on granting interviews here and there and sending messages to independence activists, his house was surrounded by F.B.I. agents, and he was shot, the bullet passing through his body. Over a period of 20 hours he bled to death. Filiberto is known to many as the Che of Puerto Rico. But these are just three examples and there are many, many more. Nation after nation has its Che Guevara figure remembered, visually linked, in conjunction with the image of the Guerrillero Heroico. These cases bring together different people under the rubric of one image based on perceived similarities. Their faces are placed with, alongside of, the
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Figure 8.1: creative commons photo by “somebody” (2008) http://www.flickr.com/ photos/sabriirmak/2195788479/
Figure 8.2: Image by Javier Cartagena (Tíno) Copyleft [http://pr.indymedia.org/ news/2005/09/9966_comment.php#10117]
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Korda-derived depiction. In the interesting case of Xanana Gusmao, the Che of East Timor became associated with Guevara’s image while a rebel fighter (see Chapter 5). Under government censorship of images of Gusmao, the Guerrillero Heroico becomes a proxy, stands in for, Gusmao. A totally different kind of relationship with the image is figured forth in Chile. Here, journalist and activist Victor Hugo Robles, known as the “Che of the Gays” literally enters the frame of the image of Che we have come to recognize and inhabits the space of the face. Robles is not a Che Guevara impersonator. Rather, for Robles, this performative work is not an artistic move but an ethical and political statement. Throughout the 1990s, Robles engaged in “numerous acts of improvised yet calculated interruption-contamination-of political events” (Oquendo-Villar 2009, online). As a long-time public figure agitating for gay rights in Chile, Robles is often present in protests performing in front of parliamentary buildings and other public places. The performative work of Robles, known as the “Che of the Gays,” called my attention to the queer valences, that is, attractions or weight, of the Guerrillero Heroico, and how this queerness might extend the politics of Ernesto “Che” Guevara to a gay politics. As I’ve explored in various ways throughout this book, the ambiguous, or disobedient, aspects of the image of Guevara are active ingredients in creating openings that allow it to be taken up in provocatively. The
Figure 8.3. Victor Hugo Robles, the Gay Che (Image courtesy of V. H. Robles)
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encounter with Robles’ work, which I explore and share now, invites us to ask: how has this image always been open to queerness? And how can its queerness inform its political saliency in productive ways? Centered in a candid interview (2014) with Robles as a heuristic entanglement, I will explore the case of the Guerrillero Heroico though a queer methodology. That is, … a scavenger methodology that uses different methods to collect and produce information on subjects who have been deliberately or accidentally excluded … The queer methodology attempts to combine methods that are often cast as being at odds with each other, and it refuses the academic compulsion toward disciplinary coherence.” (Halberstam 1998, 13)
In this mode, the interview will ground and guide the chapter: Robles tells his story uninterrupted. Following his responses, I will work to make the familiar, strange by queering elements of the image’s history, and at the same time address the image itself as a picture of a face that is already queer, by invoking elements of a Deleuze and Guattari’s (1987) “transsemiotic” (136) approach, which exemplifies this scavenger methodology. Both on the literal level and as part of a Deleuzian taxonomy, “The face is part of a signifying system that is quite different from that of spoken or written language, and it is quite different from traditional forms of representation like drawing or painting or photography” (Rushton 2002, 220). Because, “what can be called queering in the texts of Deleuze and Guattari is predicated on a queer revolution—sexual and social—and the becoming-revolutionary of the queer” (Conley 2009, 25), it is particularly appropriate for the becoming-queer of the revolutionary. Building on the “pragmatics” of C. S. Peirce, Deleuze and Guattari (1987) introduce a “transsemiotic” (136) process that is fluid multilayered and porous, a “taxonomy that can create multiple terms to drop into the classification of images and signs” (Colman 2011, 101).
INTERVIEW: El che de los Gays Q. Could you describe the situation for people who self-identify as gay, lesbian, bisexual, trans, and intersex people in Chile? A. The struggle of gays, lesbians, and transgenders in Chile is longstanding across diverse times, eras and governments; Socialist–Democratic in the 1970s,
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civic-dictatorship since the military coup in 1973 until 1988, into the 1989 return to democracy and to this date. The homosexual protests in Chile emerged publicly on April 22, 1973 under the government of Salvador Allende, later articulating (for the first time) an active and militant voice in the post-Pinochet era. Demands for sexual diversity in Chile represent a bold gesture of social emancipation, creating a context of cultural openings and political negotiations, unexpectedly provoking the intricate homosexual theme in public opinion. The activist actions of gays, lesbians, and transvestites, particularly in the 90s, with the advent of the historic Gay Liberation Movement MOVILH transcends the unofficial history of Chile by venturing to pose the just demands of an excluded minority and add demands for social change following other popular social movement struggles situating human rights at the center of our contemporary history. Forty years after the first protest for sexual diversity, Chile has seen many advances in the symbolic, political, cultural, and social fields. In the 1990s, Article 365 of the Penal Code, which punished sex between adult men with jail time, was repealed and in 2013 the Anti-Discrimination Act was passed after the public outcry when a young gay man (Daniel Zamudio) was killed in a homophobic attack. These two important legal advances were made possible through the arduous struggle of many lesbian, gay, and trans activists. In Chile homosexuality has not been criminalized since the 90s, but culturally, symbolically, and socially, direct discrimination and stigma remains, particularly for those, such as transvestites and transsexuals, who live and express their sexuality more openly. In Parliament a draft law is currently under discussion, which would regulate the relationships of cohabitation between people of the same sex, known as AVP (Life Partner Agreement) and a bill on Gender Identity that would benefit the most stigmatized population within sexual diversity, trans-male and trans-female. Chile is undergoing a process of cultural openness and symbolic transition where sexual diversity is advancing strongly in the recognition of rights, spaces, and social legitimacy. Q. What motivated you to protest publicly on the streets and what risks did you face? What were the public reactions to your marching? A. I was born on February 13, 1969 in a traditional, patriarchal, soccer-loving (futbolera) family. I remember having come home crying many times when I was little because of the repeated verbal abuse in the streets “Faggot,” “coliza,” “urania”
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Figure 8.4: Viva Allende (photo courtesy V. H. Robles)
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and other offensive words were yelled at me. I had a sweet voice and was very thin, and homosexuality at that time was a mystery. I did not understand the attacks, nor could I make sense of many gratuitous insults, but I learned to live with them, building a psychological shield that protected me from ridicule, outrage, and opinions. So while reigning in my “own room,” I began to discover my childhood sexuality, exploring bodies, emotions, and feelings with other classmates. I do not have many memories of that time, except for those first sexual explorations, although I must admit that my childhood, along with being poor, was lonely because of teasing and stigmatization. Then, as a teenager, I experimented with the theatrical adventures of trying to appear what I was not, a “heterosexual.” It was difficult to perform the tough man act because I had liked to dress flashy since my younger years, and my “act” betrayed my own ways of being. Since childhood I had felt that I was a different human being and, as I explored my first erotizaciones, my homosexual feeling began to turn into a recurring sentiment and became part of a complicated process, which I often tried to flee for fear of what people say. Happily I could not escape my destiny and I ended up transforming my childish fears into political strengths, later expressed in the many battles waged along with the Gay Liberation Movement of Chile, MOVILH during the effervescent post-Pinochet years of democracy. Today, heading toward 50 years of age, I am certain that no one either chooses to feel gay or opt for heterosexuality. I don’t think it matters so much whether homosexuality is inherited or learned, as it has led to many fruitless discussions; what I am convinced of is the need to live one’s sexuality freely. Paradoxically, I found respect for difference when I participated in my neighborhood Catholic parish in the town El Cortijo Conchalf in my youth. There amid several pilgrimages and liturgies, I experienced the social struggles of a church committed to the poor and to democracy. I was monitor of Urban Clusters, monitor for first communions, an uncle for confirmation and excelled in other roles that nurtured my strengths and idealisms, embodying beliefs of social transformation. In those moments of searching and sexual self-definition, the Catholic Church, the same one that condemns homosexual practices was transformed into a cozy and familiar place. Curiously, in the time of Pinochet, the same conservative church helped me define my gayness. After the military dictatorship, distanced from the church and full of personal rationalizations, I heard of the existence of a group of organized homosexuals and
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met a key friend in the process, who helped me discover the nascent Chilean gay movement. His name is Victor Parra, and he was the monitor for craft workshops in Population Juanita Aguirre, in Conchali. There, making paper crafts, watching his robust, attentive, and delicate figure, I discovered that something intimate between us beyond merely arts and crafts: homosexuality. What I did not perceive at the time was the importance Victor acquired in my militant political, and homosexual awakening. Amidst the paper figures, our conversations turned to the Gay Liberation Movement and its ideologies of freedom and emancipation. I remember my very first direct encounter with the Homosexual Movement in a manifestation in March 1992. A little before that, I had asked Victor Parra to invite me to the semi-clandestine meetings MOVILH held in an old house in downtown Santiago. But while waiting for the invitation, which never materialized, in Alameda de las Delicias a twist of fate allowed me to meet fellow MOVILH in full swing marching for Human Rights on March 4, 1992. There, in front of the Government Palace, marched those who would be my companions in many intense battles. At the time homosexuals, unlike heterosexuals who marched with bare faces, brought up the end of a column of protesters with their faces masked to avoid social stigma, wearing mourning bands in honor of the victims of the military dictatorship and brandishing a canvas which read: “for our fallen brothers. Gay Liberation Movement, MOVILH.” Then, overcome by surprise and overcoming fear, I joined the group, not knowing that this would be the transcendent moment for the political and historical trajectory of the Chilean homosexual movement in my own life. After this memorable event, I emphatically joined the ranks of the Gay Liberation Movement, assuming various political and public responsibilities, including creating and animating the first radio program of lesbians and gays in Chile, Open Triangle, on top of my role of MOVILH coordinator during the hardest years of our public struggle. Those were more complex, effervescent, and challenging times in our history: times where we gathered little, but felt consistent solidarity from the political left, thinkers and activists of feminist movements (which have historically driven the struggles of lesbian/gay movement) and post Marxist intellectuals, who saw in us; politicized and emancipated lesbians, gays, and transvestites, the real possibility of a profound social change in Chile. Years after joining the Gay Liberation Movement, MOVILH, and after complex and controversial work due to more radical strategic and institutional approaches
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within the same gay movement, I resolved to get away from organizational dynamics. I assumed an autonomous role independent of the organization, creating what would later be known in public demonstrations as “The Che of the Gays”. A homosexual Che who sought to metaphorically reinvent the libertarian1 utopia of the Latin American left, but was embodied in contemporary, disadvantaged and stigmatized characters, including sexual minorities; lesbians, transvestites, and gays. “The Che of the Gays” My public interventions date from 1997. That year, while the Gay Liberation Movement MOVILH withered politically, and a high level of intolerance towards homosexuals was being expressed as shown through a public opinion survey conducted by the IDEAS Foundation, I began developing a series of public impact actions, creating a character known as the Che Guevara of the Gays. These actions, accepted by some and rejected by others, contributed to the visibility of the homosexual struggle in Chile. Slightly before the emergence of the Gay Che, I attended the ceremony of the Central Confederation of Workers (CUT), held on May 1, 1997 in Almagro Park in the capital. Trying to crosslink social demands with the utopias of the gay world, I appeared with a crown of thorns, emulating Jesus and a frame decorated with a banner reading: The grass is with me, I am with you. I used the slogan because, as former journalist on Threshold radio, Pedro Henríquez, had mentioned to me, it had been used by hippie Creoles during the seventies to express their support of Salvador Allende, the candidate of the left. Then, understanding very little of my delirium with Jesus Christ, marijuana, and Allende, the press covered the presentation attributing conflicting meanings to it. So, despite my forced exile from the Gay Liberation Movement MOVILH after this mad transvestite act, I discovered this particular form of staying active, visible, and independent. On September 4, 19972, in the context of the anniversary of the death of the Argentine guerrilla [Guevara] in Bolivia, I began to develop a series of actions of public impact. With the aim of uniting the revolutionary cause with our work of emancipation, armed with a starry black beret, the number 11 shirt of the Chilean football team, a drum saying AZT (the name of the first AIDS drug), and deep red lipstick, I appeared at the Planet of the Capital nightclub, at a party against censorship organized by performance artist and theater producer, Vicente Ruiz.
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There, at a time when the actress Patricia Rivadeneira (former Chilean cultural attaché in Italy) advocated freedom of expression in our country, I threw a stream of water at her that I had in a canister of AZT to “provoke the provocateur.” Vicente Ruiz did not grasp the symbolic meaning of my act and ordered security guards to expel me from the place. “This is censorship! This is censorship!” I yelled in desperation, meanwhile the audience thought it was all part of the spectacular alternative show put on by the cultural producer. Then, outside the club, I got even with the censor by washing my ass with the same water that had thrown at the famous actress, while declaring my unhappiness about press censorship. While some might have understood it as a misogynistic aggression, my act was a metaphor, a game, an experiment: “provoke the provocateur,” to stress the limits of freedom and censorship. On September 11, 1997, armed with my Che beret, red lips, and a little star that said “CRISIS” (alluding to the political crisis that precipitated the military coup of 1973) I presented myself at the Human Rights march to the Central Cemetery. I went with the crowd in the caravan led by communist leader Gladys Marín, and heading to the memorial of the disappeared detainees. Later, amid the tombs, with violent police repression and tear gas that allowed us to neither look nor breathe, I made a public ovation for Gladys, ending by presenting her the star. Later, cementing a relationship of complicity with Gladys, I gave her the gift a three-color band (as she was the left candidate for the presidency of Chile). This caused a stir among old communist militants who saw Sodom and Gomorrah being installed in the Party. The Che of the Gays ended up being converted into a documentary, and touring various film festivals around the world including the International Film Festival of Havana, where I sparked controversy at the debut of the film by openly mentioning the famous political Cuban writer Reinaldo Arenas, a homosexual dissident. Che of the Gays received the Audience Award for Best Documentary at the Gay/Lesbian/Transgender International Film Festival in Bilbao in January 2005. Finishing a year of public visibility, November 21, 1997, I showed up at the opening of the 17th International Book Fair of Santiago, held in the Mapocho Station. There I developed one of the most publicized performances as the Che of the Gays. At an inaugural opening, all the usual guests were present, cultural figures, journalists, several writers and the highest political authorities. Everything was as usual; nothing presaged what would happen later.
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The rush began when I sat in the front row, giving a friendly wave to the former first lady of Chile, Hortensia Bussi de Allende. She, kindly, turned to hear my greeting, and was particularly surprised by my outfit. She smiled a little, and looking confused, sat alongside other distinguished guests. After we entered the room the highest authorities of the country, including Jaime Ravinet, Mayor of Santiago, Jose Pablo Arellano, Minister of Education and the then Senate President Sergio Romero began the official opening of the fair with the interpretation of National Anthem. Brashly, I jumped on stage with a red handkerchief and began to feverishly dance cueca to the tune of national anthem, while shouting: “Trial for Pinochet! Trial for Pinochet! For the missing people, Pinochet must be tried!” Nobody managed to react, thinking that my performance was part of the inaugural show. After a seemingly endless few minutes, the security guards appeared on the stage and took me to, by force, to the Mapocho Station. Then, trying to manage the moment, the authorities apologized for the incident. What a shame! Said Mayor Ravinet. The reporters covering the event were a-buzz all the way to the gates of the station. The following year, on October 16, 1998, Augusto Pinochet was arrested in London, accused by Spanish courts for crimes against humanity. Q. Why choose the figure of Che Guevara to express your political proposal at this historical juncture? A. I did not choose to be a homosexual contemporary Che, Che chose me as libertarian body, emancipated and untamed. The Che of the Gays is born as a symbolic, political, and poetic cultural creation. The dead body of Che had disappeared for a long time in Bolivia, and it was discovered on June 28, 1997, International Gay Pride Day. At the time, I was studying journalism at ARCIS University in Santiago, and the school was plastered with Che Guevara graffiti. My initial idea was to intervene in the graffiti by painting Che’s lips bright red but nobody said anything. Given this indifference, I decided to personify and transform myself into the selfsame Che. I invented The Che of the Gays but it was the body of the Che Guevara released from earthly captivity, which sought a Latin American homosexual body to reincarnate his internationalist liberation struggle. Che being the maximum metaphor of the contemporary revolutionary, I assumed his representational figure politicizing homosexuality and/or homosexualizing politics. In the entangling of new utopias with Che, I seek to demonstrate that one can be both gay and revolutionary; be gay and be a leftist, be homosexual as well as struggle for change and the transformation of society.
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Q. I notice that you use a picture frame in the marches, and from time to time you used it to “frame” other things. Could you explain a little about the use of the frame and other things together with elements of Che’s image? A. My installations are not born with an artistic sense, but with a spontaneous desire to provoke, politicize, and poeticize aesthetically. As a gay activist, I have always been motivated to hit the streets with a political message. I use aesthetic elements like the frame, pig’s feet and recently I was using the public schools coat of arms, and with a little blackboard I write messages like “free sex education” as a nod to the tuition-free education students are asking for and so on. I’m not an artist, I ‘m a journalist, activist and apostate. I feel that being cataloged as an “artist” would annul the political potentiality symbolic of The Che of the Gays. Q. Philosophically, speaking of realism and idealism today, how do you stand with respect to contemporary struggles of say occupy movements in cities around the world, and others? A. Gays, lesbians, and trans want transformations to neoliberalism: we do not accept neoliberalism. Class identity is missing in the sexual diversity movement, a political identity, of class, and of gender. Not only do we make the demand for a legal transformation but also for systemic changes, and to feel that the LGBT movement, which is a broad, diverse movement, is also a collective that should integrate more with popular social movements. We must be able to make ourselves visible, show solidarity, and intermix with broader social movement demands, which are also our struggles. The public interventions of The Che of the Gays seek to cross homosexuality with politics, sexual politics and civic militancy, problematizing the urgencies and challenges of postmodern societies. The Che of today would be homosexual, lesbian, transvestite, or HIV-positive because the struggles for sexual freedom and gender identity embody the liberatory utopias of today. The Che of the Gays faces the historically rooted violence of class, gender, and sexual identity putting his body on the stage to be martyred by intolerance, discrimination, stigma, and metaphors of HIV/AIDS. Q What are the elements that you visually identify as Che? A. Gay Che is a starry pop beret, but does not seek to trivialize the historic image,
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Figure 8.5: El Che de los Gays levanta cuadro (courtesy Robles)
or make it banal. The market trivializes Che’s revolutionary utopias profiting from its multinational image, but it crashes against a live Che incarnated in our own bodies. A Che that remains active in the social struggles of today, not as a T-shirt or a badge, but as gay, lesbian and transgender bodies libertarians, desiring, feeling, living with HIV and fighting for political, sexual, cultural, and identity rights. Q. Your use of the image breaks the mold of Che as heterosexual exemplar, what are the effects, limitations, and possibilities of taking this position? A. This is a queer Che, a slut Che, an HIV Che, a transvestite Che, a new Che giving him another life, another opportunity and another projection of/at Che. The Che of the Gays reclaims the rebellious metaphor of the Guerrillero Heroico known and recognized as a character who questions institutionality and the prevailing masculinity, using the streets, public spaces, and media to leverage his political message, drawing attention to demands for sexual diversity through cultural, aesthetic, and political presentations. Some disqualify and criticize this interpretation, by saying that Che was sexist and homophobic. I assume that Che was a prisoner of the sexual prejudices of a political structure – a culture of a bygone era. In this context, I freely reinterpret Che, thus contaminating the historical struggles
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of the Latin American left with other utopias and provoking welcome discussions about sexual freedom and the right to difference. “We have to be like Che” Fidel Castro once said. Korda’s photograph of Che Guevara, of the Guerrillero Heroico—its progeny, multiplicities, and continuing generative and transformational possibilities— defies efforts to collect, explain, critique, describe, or respond to it. It is not to be understood. Neither does it permit categorization or semiological classification and it cannot simply be called an index, icon, or symbol. Instead, it calls for new languages, or perhaps a queer science capable of addressing the image in its difference and its repetition, its generativity and transformative potentials. While the literature on queer theory is extensive, queer theorists manifest a collective interest in not only disrupting the homo/hetero binary and challenging normative social orders, but also in refusing to be categorized, or disciplined. As Annamarie Jagose (1996, 1) elaborates, “part of queer’s semantic clout, part of its political efficacy, depends on its resistance to definition, and the way it refuses to stake its claim”. David Halperin (1995) adds: “Queer is by definition whatever is at odds with the normal, the legitimate, the dominant. There is nothing in particular to which it necessarily refers. It is an identity without an essence” (62, original italics). Queer resists hierarchies, and in so doing also provides a point from which to critique sociopolitical, and institutionalized cultural codes.
Embodied engagement The question becomes one of how to engage critical methodological approaches that enact these resistances to codification effectively. Queer theorists such as Judith Halberstam (talk 2004) express a “need for a queer methodology, for the production of a new vocabulary,” which they see as necessary for imagining, forming and actualizing new forms of political agency (Olkowski 2009). By the same token, these approaches must also provide openings for getting beyond identity categories themselves, as “Identity involves a narrowing down of the internal complexities of a subject for the sake of social convention” (Braidotti 2006, 7) and might thereby permit cooptation. In feeling that photography evaded him, was unclassifiable, Barthes explicitly embraced an embodied approach. In the opening statements of Camera Lucida Barthes establishes and justifies his decision to proceed otherwise in writing a
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book about photographs. He expresses frustration with the “discomfort” he had always suffered: … the uneasiness of being a subject torn between two languages, one expressive, the other critical; and at the heart of this critical language, between several discourses, those of sociology of semiology, and of psychoanalysis – but that, by ultimate dissatisfaction with all of them, I was bearing witness to the only sure thing that was in me (however naïve it might be): a desperate resistance to any reductive system.” (Barthes 1993, 8)
Instead of turning away from this resistance, this unease at not having a language or way to talk about photographs, Barthes asks, “What does my body know of Photography?” (1993, 9). As a result, he transforms that which frustrated him into that which he would use as a methodology. Thus enabled, Barthes noticed: “I began to speak differently” (8). Similarly, Kenn Gardner Honeychurch’s (1998) understanding of bodies addresses their disruptive potential, how bodies “marked by culture act not simply as ‘representations’ of difference, but also as means through which alternative conceptions of thought are transmitted.” (270) Also marking an epistemological shift, in his 1968 doctoral thesis, Deleuze develops a critique of representation mobilizing the terms difference and repetition, which he locates as inherently transgressive. In Difference and Repetition, Deleuze proposes: “instead of identities, singularities; instead of representations, expressions; instead of interpretations, codings through mappings; instead of signifiers, sighs ‘which flash across the interval of a difference.’ ” (Deleuze 2004, 281). Barthes, Deleuze, and Guattari resisted the traditional semiology in the sense attributed to linguists such as Ferdinand de Saussure and challenged it through examples of expression, affect, and with aesthetics in general as qualities that exceed, effervesce, or overflow the possibilities offered by the ways in which the processes of meaning-making and the legibility of signs were understood. And thus semiology was rejected, and replaced eventually with a developing transsemiotics that would take into account expressivity and affect. How is the experience of the Guerrillero Heroico as a face already queer? Always in motion, it passes through the realm of the symbolic to the symptomatic and can be understood as shimmering between these kinds of classifications, and rejecting these kinds of frames. That is, the force of Guevara’s affective aesthetic appeal in the Guerrillero Heroico breaks the frame, exceeds the bounds, of any essentializing categories. Deleuze drawing on Balázs, tells us that, “the
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expression of a face and the signification of this expression have no relation or connection with space. Faced with an isolated face, we do no perceive space. Our sensation of space is abolished. A dimension of another order is opened to us” (C1, 96, my italics). While he sees the face as a bipolar entity, that is, it has a reflective and an intensive pole; each existing in different degrees but come together to compose the affection image (C1, 97). However, it is more interesting to think of it as an oscillating face that like a calligram is already completely intensive and completely reflective at the same time. It works by making us, the viewers, work: our eyes switching registers to see the different expresseds. It is more than an art historical cliché about beauty being in the eye of the beholder, rather, as Foucault carefully noted in his book on Magritte’s pipe, it is about movement and the way the movement in the eye of the beholder is to some extent caused by the image. Due to a combination of the conventional heteronormative aesthetics of this photographic portrait, the rebellious political provenance of its emergence and production, and what I will discuss below as its unfinished business, I suggest that it messes with the boundaries of time, space and gender, so that despite the strong masculinist and heterosexual stance of the historical figure of Guevara himself: the image is queer so that these observations set it in a transgressive space, a space of ontological ambiguity, and therefore of iridescent and ignescent possibility that escapes chronological time.
Disobedient onto-epistemology: The face says “no” In many ways the famous image of Che Guevara occupies its own time: as a continuing transmission or distribution of particular features. It thus escapes linear time, existing somehow in its own rhythm of appearing and re-appearing, or being distributed over time. Every “copy” is something new and the difference in repetitions of the image not only accrue in the sense of creating more relations between all the variants, but also in the sense of creating contexts/grounds for its distributed agentic possibilities (Gell 1990). In this sense the image of Che lends itself to being viewed as a mobile topology as “the significance of topological approaches is to focus attention on all aspects of relationality, whether in space or in time” (Shields 2013, 215). Although this picture had a precise origin in Alberto Korda’s photograph, the mystery of its dissemination around the world and the confusion and various claims as to where and by whom it was first published permit a scene with multiple entries. With many doors to be opened, we can think of the image
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in terms of movements and displacements. As a result, the image contains elements that are simultaneously phantasmagoric yet sticky, and so we see the hybridization of Korda’s image as it is re-rendered and transformed with all the subsequent graphic versions that are simultaneously new images, while repeating this one. Perhaps this famous picture of Guevara’s face can be thought—along the lines of the topological—as more knot-like, in that its surface both reveals and conceals itself thus disobeying the two-dimensional ethos of the diagram. Instead it oscillates ontologically, perhaps flickering, like the flames of a fire where form and substance cannot be divided (Bachelard, 1964). While there are elements or features that remain more or less consistent, the essence of its being is actually change. In thinking of it as flickering, one can imagine the movement of portions of the surface to the concealed parts of the knot as other parts are revealed, and yet at the same time this concealment is troubled by the recognition of what is revealed—a recognition that also functions as a multiplicity. Each repetition of the image further populates the family of Guevarian-inspired pictures, partially overlapping one another, yet always introducing something different. Like family resemblances, it is difficult to atomize or pick apart specific visual element that precisely carry on, but the intelligibility of the face is, as Bateson (1980, 76) notes, “derived from a combination of two different realms of data: one visible, the other invisible, and calibrated to provoke abductions that come to be formative about these data thereafter”; see also Greenwood 2005, 95 in Küchler 2012, 32). Let’s look at an example.
Paris matched: Journeys into the face While systematically reviewing the Paris Match editions of the mid to late 1960s, I noticed something peculiar. News of Guevara, by now a legendary figure, and different images of him regularly appeared here and there, but it was in the July 1967 issue that journalist/author and decorated war-veteran Jean Pierre Lucien Osty, writing under the pen-name, Jean Lartéguy wrote; the article entitled “Les Guerilleros” facing a full page image of the Guerrillero Heroico (figure 8.6). Lartéguy had met Guevara in 1967. I found no evidence of how he obtained the picture, although by this time it would have been available in Giangiacomo Feltrinelli’s bookstores. The article’s inserted photo, under the by-line “Che Guevara, where is he then?” shows Cubans already gathering in large manifestations with Guevara’s words calling for the creation of two, three, many
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Figure 8.6: Pages from Paris Match (photo C. Cambre)
Vietnams, featured on a building’s billboard in the background. In the midst of this crowd, a basic two-tone version of the Guerrillero Heroico is held aloft as-if to say: “Here he is!” While the massive eruption of copies of this photograph would not occur until after Guevara’s death, various images and stories continued to circulate, murmurs that were to grow into a roar (Figure 8.7). Early in October of 1967, the Polish graphic artist Roman Cieslewicz, who was living in France, designed a poster-like cover for Opus magazine’s third issue. The facial features of the Guerrillero Heroico are removed and, in this case, replaced with text. Suddenly, the “photographic face” has become the ground for other expressions, yet it is still the same icon (if we recall Deleuze’s description above). The word “Che” instead of the eyes and “si” for the nose gesture toward the dynamics of words and slogans, as if the face itself is affirming, “Che, yes.” In itself the design was revolutionary for a magazine cover, and honored Cieslewicz’s collagist background, honed in the tradition of Max Ernst. As a multilayered knotting, the words “Che Si” also echo Alain Jouffroy’s article within that issue, where he discusses in what turns out to be an ironic coincidence the play absences and presences of the image of Guevara and Fidel Castro.
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Figure 8.7: Screenshot from Montag blog (https://pedromarquesdg.wordpress.com/ tag/roman-cieslewicz/) 2014
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Figure 8.8: Close up of Paris Match page (photo C. Cambre)
It can be assumed that the Opus magazine cover with its bold flat orange and mauve, heavy stylized black outline, and vivid red background in a nod to the Cuban poster art tradition, was designed while Guevara was still alive (Marques 2013, online) although its publication coincided with the news of his death. As if the magazine cover was not politicized enough, the “Che Si” also recalls the chants of “Cuba si! Yanqui No!” of the Cuban revolution and the documentary film “Cuba Si!” by Chris Marker (1961), which was banned in France for its anti-American sentiment (2012, online) and also served to have Marker himself banned from the United States (Contactmusic 2012, online). Did these words somehow respond to the emotion provoked by the face? Was this what the face somehow told Cieslewicz? The chevrons beside the “Che,” the vivid colours, and the hair literally blowing off the page insist on participation: there was a call, and this is the reverberating reply. Within days of the Opus publication, the photograph by Freddy Alborta of Che Guevara’s corpse surrounded by his assassins began to circulate as proof of Guevara’s death (Figure 8.9). With its Christological and iconic features the tragic image would become the second most famous photograph of Guevara, as well as one of the most reproduced in the twentieth century.
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Figure 8.9: The Corpse of Che Guevara 1967 by Freddy Alborta
The shock and disbelief of many at the time was dispelled by Fidel Castro on October 18, 1967, with his reading of Guevara’s last letter in a eulogy delivered in front of a five-story image of the Guerrillero Heroico graphically and monumentally emphasizing that this was to be the memorial image of Guevara and not Alborta’s picture. Since that moment, both images have been reproduced ceaselessly, and have become the magnetic poles of the forces of attraction and repulsion around the idea of Che Guevara. I will address this other image later in this chapter. I continued to turn the pages of Paris Match past the end of 1967 into 1968 with the progression of each issue reflecting a world turning upside down: the mystery of what happened to Guevara’s body; U.S. President Lyndon Johnson’s escalation of the Vietnam War was causing his government to unravel as anti-war protests were held around the world; the Prague spring in Czechoslovakia; Martin Luther King’s assassination on April 4, a short six months after Guevara’s and in what was to be only a month before Robert F. Kennedy’s shooting on June 5, 1968. That summer would be convulsed with student riots pulsating around the world and the Black Power salute rupturing the Olympics in Mexico City. In the midst of this turmoil are the student uprisings in France. The May 18 issue of Paris Match runs the headline “la révolte des étudiants” and the bright red cover of the June section bears the bold text “Histoire d’une Révolution: Les
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Figure 8.10A: Page from Paris Match, May 18, 1968 (Edition Carolina Cambre)
journées de Juin.” Inside were dozens of images, but one in particular struck me as curious. No one in the picture acknowledges the photographer; in fact, it is as if the camera is not there. It is a candid moment in the midst of chaos. In particular, the face of the student with the beret framed by longish dark hair catches my attention at first because of its ambivalent gender characterization. It is apparent in the cropped version of the picture, that this symmetrical, smooth and hairless face, seemingly reflective and turned inward, has a certain “to-be-looked-at-ness” (Mulvey 1975). The framing and narrative structure of the photograph, creates some ambiguity around this student’s gender. For instance, his depiction does not conform to the male gaze, which frequently looks directly at the camera as if on a par with the photographer/viewer. In fact, it is just the opposite; this figure can be said to be performatively coded female in his downward gaze and pensive, vulnerable, and defensive stance. Perhaps the age of the photograph or the techniques of the day have given the face a softness, which combined with the full lips and wavy hair, make one take a second look. While the button fly jeans, denim jacket with possibly a cigarette package in one of the pockets, large hands and wristwatch code the slim but solid figure as masculine, an air of uncertainty persists. The face, with its tension and apprehension, is being gazed at by the viewer rather than gazing out at the viewer, and is thus coded female, while a certain sense of being exposed presents itself in the position of the hands, poised, half-raised and wary of the policeman’s baton. At the same time, the position of mastery occupied by the photographer is gestured at with the camera’s location being with the police and looking at the students “as-if ” part of that deployment.
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Why did the photographer take or select this particular picture for a full-page spread of this issue of Paris Match at a time where the mayhem and chaos of the streets would have provided plenty of drama? The photograph has a quality of convergence between stasis and action; it intervenes precisely at the moment where the intensity and tension of the moment of potential violence are in question and times seems to slow. Will the baton be used on this unarmed student? Do the hands of the student poised defensively actually serve to make the violence visible, real though not at this point actualized? At this point one might wonder, how did Che Guevara get there? The formal resonances with Korda’s Guerrillero Heroico are clearly noticeable, the famous image is presented performatively, it is palpably informing the editorial choices, the framing of this photograph, as well as the frame within
Figure 8.10B: Page from Paris Match, May 18, 1968 (Edition Carolina Cambre)
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the frame of the hair and beret styled in a particular way and all under the umbrella of the charged atmosphere of rebellion at the Sorbonne. With what I would describe as the elective affinities between Guevara’s image and this youth at this moment, in the context of Guevara’s presence in the mainstream media of the day, and posters of Guevara, as well as other leftist leaders, plastered on the university’s walls, it would be difficult for a photo-journalist to miss the apparent entry into the frame of the image by this youth. To understand, or intuit, elective affinities is to access an embodied language: “A language no longer mastered through empirical observation alone, but through the visualization of the spatio-temporal logic of affinity” (Kim 2003 in Distributed Objects, 2012, 36) where the face can escape its own sexual assignation and lend itself to varying performative iterations of the spatio-temporally dispersed “population” of Guevara’s images as products of a Gellian “extended mind,” or externalized and collectivized cognitive processes (Gell 1998, 221–2). This logic of affinity parallels notions of historiographical montage envisioned by Walter Benjamin where, “dialectical images that reveal invisible correspondences, this embodied knowledge passes through objects, and then back into bodies, and then back again to objects, and so on” (Gough 2012, 116). These invisible correspondences were also explored by the radical art historian Aby Warburg, who was interested in the “montage of attractions” (Eisenstein [1923] 1974 in Gough 2012).
Detour: De-facing, that is, queering methodology In the Deleuzo–Guattarian philosophy of positive forces and affirmative actions: the affirmation of an ontology of becoming, in the sense of “rhizomatic relatedness” (Tuhkanen 2009) as well as of an open futurity, in terms of virtualities and not mere possibilities. As mentioned earlier, the images are linked by elective affinities, or invisible resonances calling to each other an-other time-space dimension, and yet topologically connected through their expressiveness, and participation in social memories: this is the kind of “seeing” or queer methods that the face demands. In Deleuze’s work, it is “not a matter of interpreting certain preformed codes and of applying those codes to the markings one sees expressed on a face; it is, rather, an intuitive mode of seeing” (Rushton 2002, 220).
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Figure 8.11: Gay Liberation Front U.K. 1971 Cover (author unknown)
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The case of Downcast Gays In a striking parallel stance to that of Robles in Chile, the London Gay Liberation Front published a tilted Guerrillero Heroico on the cover of INK in 1971. Featuring a clenched fist with logo instead of the star on the beret, blue eye shadow, and red lipstick, the image recalls the impulse Robles had when he saw the Che graffiti in 1997. However, he was totally unaware of this British precedent. INK was an underground magazine and probably run as a collective. Since most such magazines were closed down by 1975 through prosecutions, it is difficult to access its contents. However, in With Downcast Gays, a section from the London Gay Liberation Front Manifesto, author and activist Andrew Hodges reveals some of the context of the time. In Part 8 (Hodges and Hutter 1974) he writes: In the past the only genuine political choice open to gay people was one of withdrawal from the whole political arena. Persecuted or rejected by Right, Left and Centre, how could they find any political identity that did not necessitate a totally negative attitude to their homosexuality? Few individuals were in a position to follow the example of Andre Gide, who set out to question Stalin on the role of homosexuals in Society! Perhaps, through a new gay consciousness, we shall develop a genuine alternative society in which homosexuals pay attention to their special needs; … Indeed, a touchstone for the humanity and completeness of political theories and revolutionary movements might well be the degree of welcome they afford to gay people, for as one despised minority we can be a measure of the likely treatment of others, and a genuine test of any revolutionary thinker’s ability truly to think afresh.
In section 5, Hodges advocates for political drag, in a section so named. He argues that the Gay Liberation movement demands a far more radical change than simply overthrowing the wrong-sex theory. As Robles does decades later, Hodges insists: We are not arguing about the assignment of gay people to one or another gender role, but questioning the validity of gender roles. We reject the concepts of masculinity and femininity, with their respective associations of dominance and submission. (1974 Section 5)
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Final Thoughts or Not? To some extent it is not appropriate to conclude in the case of this image, since its queer tendencies are to continue being embodied and transgressing one’s ideas of what it “should” or “should not” be or do. In 1967 John Berger wrote about the degree of emotional correspondence with respect to Freddy Alborta’s photograph of the dead Che, the second most famous image of Guevara. Alborta’s photo of Guevara’s body draped across a laundry basin with the general, soldiers and journalists has an uncanny resemblance, as Berger famously pointed out, to Rembrandt’s painting of The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Tulp. There is the exact same number of figures, the demonstration of the corpse, the gazes of the characters criss-crossing and forming an invisible mesh of lines of sight. And yet this photograph was unstaged. Alborta himself was unaware of Rembrandt’s painting that preceded this image in all its similitudes. In his essay on this final image, Argentine sociologist Eduardo Grüner insists on the phantasmic qualities of the picture: “the body has condensed ‘allegorically’ all those significations: that which moves, keeps moving, despite suffering an undeniable defeat—it is not the individual body, but all that … ” and then asks, “But, what kind of ghost are we talking about here?” (online). Identifying the ghost, the remnant of the past that is always about to return or re-emerge in the present, as a debt, he locates the movement in the details of a “work of art, a photograph, a song, a story, a life—and thus also a death.” However, the pathosformeln he describes, while accurately denominated as debt is not so much about the work of mourning, or a psychological return of the repressed, than it is about a gift. Both Mauss in his ground-breaking work, and Margaret Mead in her introduction, emphasize that with a gift comes debt. Guevara’s “last face has eyes that accuse and a melancholic smile … He never kept anything for himself, he never asked for anything. To live is to give oneself, he believed, and he gave” (Galeano 1993, 178). Because the affect can be understood as independent from measured spacetime, and at the same time is “created in a history which produces it as expressed and the expression of a space or a time” (Deleuze 2005, 99), the transsemiotic element is that of affect itself. An affect that bears witness to rhizomatic resonances and similitudes so that all these people, times and spaces participate in this ongoing, never finished gift exchange, and therefore always remains emergent.
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Notes Chapter One 1 Heroic Guerilla Fighter.
Chapter Two 1 The most notable variation being Irish artist Jim Fitzpatrick’s 1967 stylized poster featuring a two-tone face in black and white on a bright red background. Fitzpatrick distributed his poster widely in Europe. In 2008, he signed over the copyright of his image to the William Soler Pediatric Cardiology Hospital in Cuba. 2 Street graffiti of Che Guevara wearing a Che t-shirt in Bergen, Norway from Wikipedia (public domain) available at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Che_Guevara_in_popular_culture 3 In October 1968, Antonio Pérez “ÑIKO” designed a poster for the Comisión de Orientación Revolucionaria (C.O.R.). It was not printed at that historical juncture where the testimonial photograph was preferred as the way to reveal the energetic and vigorous image of Che. In 1968, the design was reformulated and the offset printed poster had a communicative effect and symbolic meaning that later became representative of Cuban graphic art (Campos 2010, personal communication). 4 Campos’ work centers on the Cuban political poster and poster art on which he has published extensively within Cuba. 5 Article 6bis of the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic works, states: “(1) Independently of the author’s economic rights, and even after the transfer of the said rights, the author shall have the right to claim authorship of the work and to object to any distortion, mutilation or other modification of, or other derogatory action in relation to, the said work, which would be prejudicial to his honor or reputation” (1971, online). 6 One question to be raised here is whether it is even appropriate to attempt the branding of political art. Unlike most corporate brands, the photograph was intended for a different public and purpose (historical documentation). So is the debate about the branding of Che’s image itself not problematic? In a sense, a
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198 Notes commercial practice is being applied to a cultural artifact that has nothing to do with the province of commerce. 7 “Accenture Plc and AT&T dropped him as their pitch man after he became engulfed in allegations of multiple extramarital affairs following a minor car accident outside his Florida home on November 27.” 8 Inexplicably, Miami is included in the book’s section on Latin America, “Part II: Mimicking a Martyr: San Ernesto of Latin America.” By having it placed last, after Argentina, Bolivia, and Venezuela, it serves the rhetorical purpose of undermining the prior chapters with its more disparaging tone and praise of ex-C.I.A. assassins. 9 Following C. S. Peirce’s three principal semiotic classifications for signs: icon, index, and symbol. 10 The Torricelli Act was designed to paralyze the Cuban economy and cause the fall of the president. It forbade American companies, and subsidiaries abroad from engaging in any trade with Cuba. Foreign ships using American ports were forbidden from entering Cuban ports for a period of 180 days and foreign ships returning from Cuba were also detained. Cuban families living in the U.S. were barred from sending any cash remittances to Cuba. Torricelli corruption – http:// www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/congress/july-dec02/bkgtorricelli_09-30.html and http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/24/nyregion/24torricelli.html?_r=1 11 In 2005 alone the barefoot doctors program helped the most poverty-stricken of six Latin American countries and 20 in Africa. The staff delivered more than half a million babies, carried out 1,657,867 operations and gave almost 9 million vaccinations. In Haiti, Cuba has been providing 2,500 doctors and as much medicine as its economy permits since 1998. 12 Journalist Teresa Bo (2010) writes, “Colombia is still at war. You find trenches in every corner, tanks, Blackhawk helicopters and lots of soldiers. Fighting takes place here almost every day … But we managed to find the left-wing FARC rebels, who are still fighting the Colombian government… . They said that a fight with the military was coming … Commander Duber: ‘Our main enemy is president Uribe and the armed forces … . There are elections in Colombia. People can vote for whom they want. But we will continue fighting. The ideology of the FARC is to win or die, that’s what Che Guevara said,’ Duber told us. In Cauca the fighting is still ongoing. Duber adds: ‘Presidente Uribe offers money [and] cars to those guerrillas who turn themselves in. Those who sell themselves are not guerrillas. They should give that money to those who are still starving in this country. We don’t need it.’ Photo credit: “Guerrillero colombiano de las FARC, montañas del Caquetá, Colombia” (2001) by Venezuelan photographer Pedro Ruíz. http://www.zonezero. com/kordasche/ruiz/ruiz.html 13 In 1976, Congress decided that the term of copyright protection should be the life of the author plus 50 years.
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14 Postproduction art is art that uses other ready-mades following the notion originated by surrealist artist Marcel Duchamp, and builds a piece on or with those already circulating. A handy example would be the D.J. music scene where music is “sampled” or quoted in innovative ways. People recognize the citation and understand how the D.J. is playing with it; they are part of the story. 15 Lincoln Cushing, On the Past, Present & Future of the Political Poster Interview by Romana Cohen. A Plazm/Concrete CMS production. ©1991–2007 Plazm Media, Inc. Plazm MAGAZINE DESIGN NEWS & EVENTS STORE ABOUT BLOG http:// www.plazm.com/magazine/features/all-articles/lincoln-cushing/lincoln-cushing3
Chapter Three 1 I am grateful to Dr. Magda Lewis of the Faculty of Education at Queen’s University for her guidance. She helped me first frame this enquiry so long ago when it began as a paper in her class. She would always ask: Why this? Why here? Why now? She has provided a fruitful springboard indeed. 2 I use the term “image” to designate all derived versions of the original matrix photograph of Che Guevara’s face taken by Alberto Korda. Thus, they can be in different media, colors, sizes, and by various authors but they always recognizably refer back to the original. 3 In order to preserve the anonymity of participants, in some cases proper names, places and circumstances have been changed.. 4 Benedict XVI has written an extremely thorough encyclical on hope in the Christian context. The encyclical does not reference the work of Gabriel Marcel whose doctrine on hope was written much earlier but the definitions and concepts are complementary. Similarly, Martin Buber’s work within the Judaic tradition is in harmony with the Christian understanding. In comparison to other philosophical concepts, there is comparatively scarce literature on hope; however Marcel’s Homo Viator: Introduction to a Metaphysic of Hope is widely regarded as a seminal text. 5 Designer rebellion is a term coined and used by jan jagodzinski, Department of Secondary Education, University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada.
Chapter Four 1 I gratefully acknowledge the Research Abroad Scholarship administered by the Faculty and Graduate Studies and Research, University of Alberta, for a four-month fieldwork grant beginning in April 2007 supporting this case study.
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200 Notes 2 In a recent incident in Baghdad, Iraqi journalist Muntadhar al-Zeidi flung his shoes at visiting U.S. President George W. Bush, and was immediately taken into custody as a result. The Associated Press reported that one day after the incident, Mr. al-Zeidi’s apartment “was decorated with a poster of Latin American revolutionary leader Che Guevara” (Reid 2008, A4). 3 The popular two-tone image also appeared around this time, the work of Irish artist, Jim Fitzpatrick, who slightly tilted the eye position upward prompting many to describe Guevara’s attitude as defiant and courageous. Although this was not the raw, more vulnerable feeling transmitted by the original, it was just as infectious and promoted further spread of the image. 4 (Spanish original) Mientras en Cuba persiste la dimensión pública de su figura, en el mundo capitalista perdura ante todo como un tópico central de la contracultura juvenil. El póster marca el territorio liberado en el cuarto del adolescente, donde el nonsense está cargado de significación. Ciertamente, Guevara no funda por sí solo el imaginario juvenil, pero en su legado confluyen algunos de sus rasgos principales: el impulso al nomadismo, el sentimiento anti-sistema, el ideal de una muerte romántica en el esplendor, todo ello dispuesto en una cierta facha nocturna. Un look rebelde que no tiene nada de trivial, dado que los iconos sólo son delgados en apariencia … manteniendo, sobre todo, el espíritu de la utopía igualitaria, en una referencia que perdura fundamentalmente en la militancia juvenil. 5 They used this expression in their declaration to contrast with their self-identification as Marxist-Leninist Bolivarians (after Simon Bolivar who contributed to Venezuela’s gaining independence from Spain in the early 1800s). 6 The word barrio normally indicates neighborhood in Spanish but the way it is used in Caracas is to designate the ghettos where self-made shanty homes sprout, usually on hillsides or around the bloques to house the overflowing numbers of people living in poverty. 7 While Wittgenstein did seem to indicate there were cases exempt from this notion, some scholars debate it. However we can generally say he took “meaning is use” as a motto. The key is thinking of meaning not as something simply residing in an object, but rather something that is co-creatively in motion. 8 “… Guevara trascendió ese origen para proyectarse en el … luchas de liberación multiplicaron el mito.” 9 “… conforman un teoría orientada a la acción inmediata. Ensayos de agitación, relatos de la experiencia guerrillera, están escritos en un lenguaje llano y despliegan la retórica emotiva del panfleto.”
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Chapter Five 1 Omnis doctrinal vel rerum est vel signorum, sed res per signa discuntur (Augustine De doctr. Chr. I 1, 1963, 9 in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2.1). Having said this, the domain of contemporary semiotics has developed so vastly even since the modern moments with Saussure and Peirce that taking up the conversation any further back becomes unwieldy unless there is a specific purpose. Yet, I cannot resist mentioning the intriguing medieval proposal put forth by the French theologian Peter Abelard (1079–c. 1142) who suggested that, “the ‘truth’ that a sign purportedly captured existed in a particular object as an observable property of the object itself, and outside it as an ideal concept within the mind. The ‘truth’ of the matter, therefore, was somewhere in between” (Danesi and Perron 1999, 43). Almost 1,000 years ago, Abelard had grasped and expressed the complexity of perception in a way that did not create a dualism like the materialist or idealist poles seem to do, and that gestured toward a third position anticipating later developments of the Saussurean and Peircian models. 2 Etymologically, artifice has three different routes/roots, one is as the Greek techné (TEKHNE), who was the goddess or the spirit (daimona) of art, technical skill and craft. Another derives from the word for artifice, stratagem, or plan: metis (may’-tis). Odysseus (or “Ulysses”) is associated with metis in the Homeric Epics as polymetis, or “man of many wiles” and the famous strategem (metis) of the Trojan horse. Finally, there is the Latin root, artificium “making by art, craft,” from artifex (gen. artificis) “craftsman, artist,” from ars “art” (see art (n.)) + facere “do” (see factitious): meaning “device, trick” (the usual modern sense). Other definitions include: artifice, to name or make by art: An ingenious expedient, a man{oe}uvre, stratagem, device, contrivance: human skill as opposed to what is natural. 3 By structure of the sensible, Rancière is making a Platonic link to the later dialogues particularly the Timaeus. 4 Hopkins: “… perhaps we shall be right to say all artifice reduces itself to the principle of parallelism. Now the force of this recurrence is to beget a recurrence or parallelism answering to it in the words or thought and, speaking roughly and rather for the tendency than the invariable result, the more marked parallelism in structure whether of elaboration or of emphasis begets more marked parallelism in the words and sense (1965, 81–2). 5 In 1902, Charles S. Peirce defined virtual as “A virtual X (where X is a common noun) is something, not an X, which has the deficiency (virtus) of an X.” (See also Edmund Burke’s doctrine of virtual representation, which is not representation but is supposedly as good as.) 6 For Rob Shields, there are some core assumptions he builds on: first, the virtual “is neither absence nor an unrepresentable excess or lack” (2003, 20); second,
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202 Notes reality is not a monolithic thing it needs to be treated as “more fine-grained concepts” (SHIELDS 2003, 20) so that the real can be seen as multiple and more than simply the tangible “allowing us to being to conceptualize processes such as becoming in terms of emergence and dialogism (cf. Bakhtin 1981, 21); and third we are already accustomed to “day-to-day manipulation of virtual and actual objects” (Shields 20) so that we can see ourselves as literate in terms of understanding the virtual though we may not have come to an explicit structuring of those knowledges. 7 FALINTIL “forças armadas da libertação Nacional de Timor-Leste” translates as “The Armed Forces for the National Liberation of East Timor” originally began as the military wing of the leftist political party FRETILIN.
Chapter Six 1 There is a push to sell this image in the U.S.A. as a type of designer rebellion. Being divorced from its original or continuing political context, it is strictly a de-politicized and de-historicized figure commercially. 2 Reflecting afterward, the artist can come to new understandings of how and what he or she has learned through the process of creation. Creativity is not something born inside the artist that grows on its own, in a vacuum, and spontaneously emerges; on the contrary, creativity emerges through interacting with material and the environment. Creativity also requires attunement and receptivity. When immersed in creation, we attend to our materials responsively and fluidly; they work on us as much as we work on them. Our conscious mind stops driving so that we can better concentrate with all our senses, and our subconscious is given greater play. Biologically, this is the most efficacious approach considering the human subconscious processes 20 million items of incoming environmental information per minute, whereas the conscious mind is significantly slower (Lipton 2005). Much of the deeper work of interpretation is done by the subconscious mind. How many of us have awoken in the night with a sudden clarity regarding a problem of the day before, or had a startlingly clear advance in our understanding while we were busy doing something else? Because I regard creativity as an alchemical process, a comment was warranted. However, I am aware creativity is an entire field of study and I am not going to explore it beyond this note. Interdisciplinary work inherently has the limitation of involving the researcher in areas outside of her expertise, yet the move is not invalid intellectually. 3 The influence of IRMs was so vital that not mentioning them would be like concealing the parts of my experiences that have had the most profound
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impacts—I also keep in mind that not all things can be explained. Yet, it was in the research circles, in Dr. Weber-Pillwax’s course, and in ceremonies that I started understanding what needed to be done. I must underline that I do not know whether I would have engaged in this collective collage had it not been for IRMs. As representation of research, “an artistic composition pithily provides a synopsis of some of the salient features found in the data” (2008). See also Jean-François Lyotard: “Anamnesis constitutes a painful process of working through, a work of mourning for the conflicting emotions, loves and terrors, associated with these wounds. Perhaps the process is beginning.” (2004, 107) I use play in the following sense: play does not mean not to be rigorous, but to refuse to be paralyzed by the constraints of scholarship … shake off rigor mortis hiding the embryonic idea, rework, reword, and move things around, do things differently, follow uncharted paths … work on coherence … co-here stick together. This notion corresponds beautifully with Hannah Arendt’s (1959) theorizing of the freedom, and Che Guevara’s notion of action which I explore further elsewhere. An excellent example can be found in the 1967 “Collage of Indignation” put together by a group of over 150 New York-based artists to represent their anger at the Vietnam War. Each individual alchemical experience of the image cannot be determined exactly. The position and energy of any particle defies simultaneous determination. The role of elective affinity also manifests itself, for those who are interpellated by the image are also inclined to hear it. Quantum physics’ famous Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle is based on a non-deterministic view of the fundamental building blocks of the material world. His philosophical and political work is taken up by many Latin American thinkers: prominent among these are French-Brazilian Marxist philosopher Michael Löwy and Argentine writer Néstor Kohan. Julia Kristeva’s idea of semiotic differs from those of C. S. Peirce and Roland Barthes. However, she bases her early work (Sémiotikè: recherches pour une sémanalyse, 1969), on the great semiological theories of Saussure, and Barthes and the semiotics of C. S. Peirce. Repression of the nonlinear, i.e. an alternative consciousness and perception of the world, is the result of the ascendancy of patriarchy and logocentrism that privileges male rationality, see Murphy (1995, 75). Both Derrida and Barthes were concerned with absence, presence, temporality, haunting and mourning, the limits of language, iterability “the very concept of constitution itself needs to be deconstructed” (Derrida 1973b). Both were concerned with unsettling the very notion of structure itself.
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204 Notes 14 I note that Sandoval’s use of semiotic differs from Kristeva’s. Kristeva uses the term semiotic to differentiate from the symbolic. For her it is a modality that signifies based on the marks of drives of the other-of-language, that she has explored through work on abjection, love, horror. Because I see it as not contradictory to the Barthesian position Sandoval takes, rather it has the potential to enhance and deepen it, I am holding them together in this piece. 15 In Camera Lucida, Barthes (1981) discusses the “fugitive testimony” of photography (93) evolving his concepts of studium and punctum. He writes, “it is not possible to posit a rule of connection between the studium and the punctum (when it happens to be there). It is a matter of co-presence” (42). Very often the punctum is a detail, or a flash which sometimes crosses the field (96). It cannot be named, it is an accident which “wounds” or “pricks” me” (27). 16 Understanding how Sandoval’s (2000) differential movement, consciousness, or position operates is to remember that one must simultaneously be able to understand dominant viewpoints and how they sees their realities, as well as being able to see from ones’ own place and then “shuttling between realities, their identities reformatting out of another, third site” (85). 17 They only appeal to certain types of people. Those people who are grounded in specific knowledges, but icons do so very powerfully, and the exact details do not need to be accurate. 18 Guevara develops his theory of the New Man in Socialism and Man in Cuba (March, 1965) originally titled, “From Algiers, for Marcha. The Cuban Revolution Today.” His article was written in the form of a letter to Carlos Quijano, editor of Marcha, a weekly published in Montevideo, Uruguay. 19 Guevara’s thoughts on the New Man resonate with Henri Lefebvre’s earlier concept of l’homme totale where he suggests acting-on “all ‘Moments’ of revelation, emotional clarity and self-presence as the basis for becoming more self-fulfilled.” “Moments” became a motif throughout his work as a theory of presence and basis for a practice of emancipation: “They are escape-hatches from the alienated condition of everyday life” (see Shields 2011). There may be a connection to be explored between Lefebvre and Guevara through one of Lefebvre’s good friends the famous Argentine collagist Antonio Berni. Incidentally, all three men were Marxists and concerned with countering alienation at the level of everyday life. 20 I describe the context of the photograph elsewhere in this book. 21 I hope my own points of reference have become apparent through this work. 22 Schwitters’ undogmatic, non-élitist and democratic collage work conjured up its own magic from the rejected and the discarded: small wonder that the Nazis found Schwitters’ art subversive and tried to eradicate it (see Freundel 1998). 23 Communication is not consensus; it is the breakdown or the gap. The interruption is more communicative than the agreement—now this is a true learning
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space—and ethical, recall how Emmanuel Levinas (1979, Totality and Infinity) asks us to be interrupted by the Other in the face-to-face encounter. 24 Because of this “showing” we trust, we believe and we hope, it will be shown again: “Trust your images more than you trust your knowledge, more than you trust your world.” (George Szirtes; online: http://georgeszirtes.blogspot.ca/) and we turn to face the image. In this case, it is an image of a face.
Chapter Eight 1 Libertarian is used here, not as someone who is proposing market and economic liberalism (U.S.A.) but rather as someone who literally defends liberty by opposing tyranny, or resisting the established government. 2 While it is known that the anniversary is on October 9th. Robles connects preparations for the commemoration of Guevara’s assassination on September the 4th to comment on the triumphs as well as the bloodshed of that day in Chile (September 4th 1970 was the day Allende won the election, and the day in 1993 that the Gay Disco “Divine” burnt to the ground in Santiago killing 16.
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Index Abelard, Peter 201n. 1 About Looking (Berger) 60 action 5, 83–4 adequation 97, 104 agency 111, 116, 119, 154 AISF (All-India Students Federation) 37–8 Alborta, Freddy 188–9, 194–5 alchemy 142–3 All-India Students Federation (AISF) 37–8 Allingham, Peter 104–5 anchors 44, 53 Angelico, Fra 110 Annunciation, The 110 Annunciation, The (Angelico) 110 “apartheid wall”, Palestine 40–2 appropriation 27–9, 30 Arab Spring 154–6 Arendt, Hannah 83–4 Human Condition, The 83 art 27–31, 111, 149–50, 153–4 see also collage witnessing and 165–8 Art and Agency (Gell) 111, 119 artifice 5, 97–8, 102–11, 109–12, 153–4 artifacts 116, 119, 156 Atkin, Douglas: Culting of Brands, The 34 avatars 156 Barthes, Roland 58, 60, 182–3 Camera Lucida 39, 86, 182–3 Batista, Fulgencio 2 Baucau 112 Berger, John 58–62 About Looking 60 Black Che, the 169 Bolivia 20 brand 11 Brand Nation (Twitchell) 33–4 branding 4, 11–17, 24–7, 34–6 Cuba and 19–21
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C.A.G.V.C. (Colectivo Alexis Gonzáles Vive Carajo) 65, 69, 70–8, 80–8 Camera Lucida (Barthes) 39, 86, 182–3 Campos, Reinaldo Morales 17–19 capitalism 8 Caracas 5, 65, 69–76 see also C.A.G.V.C. Carroll, Rory 18 case study research 65–6 Casey, Michael 8 Che’s Afterlife: The Legacy of an Image 15–16, 19–21 Castro, Fidel 2 ceremony 134 Chávez, Hugo 69–70 Che Guevara: Icon, Myth and Message (Kunzle) 68 Che Guevara Studies Center 18 Che of Puerto Rico 169 Che of the Gays, The 171–2, 177–9 see also Robles, Victor Hugo Chennai 37–8 Che’s Afterlife: The Legacy of an Image (Casey) 15–16, 19–21 Chile 172–9 chora 129–30 Cieslewicz, Roman 186–8 Coca–Cola 12 Colectivo Alexis Gonzáles Vive Carajo (C.A.G.V.C.) 65, 69, 70–8, 80–8 collage 5, 122–5, 138–43 anti-representational 139–40, 142 closure of 126, 130 epistemology of 131–2, 138–9 generative 139, 141, 142 juxtaposition and 132–3 meaning and 126–31 media, and the 142 ontology of 125–6, 138–9 openings and 129, 130 pedagogical disjunction and 139, 142 politics and 128 uncertainty and 132–3
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222 Index collective memories 16, 27 Colombia 21 colonialism 135–6 commoditization 25–6, 37 consciousness 86, 166 copyright 8, 10–11, 18–19, 27 copywrongs 30 Coubre, La 67 Cuba 2–3, 15–21, 157 foreign aid and 19–20 “Cuba Si!” (Marker, 1961) 188 Culting of Brands, The (Atkin) 34 Cushing, Lincoln 29 Dada 128 Deleuze, Gilles 51, 172, 183, 192 Derrida, Jacques 131–2, 134 différance and 132, 135 “Structure, Sign, and Play” 93–5 desire 42–3, 46 Didi-Huberman, Georges 58, 104 differential consciousness 134 discourse 148–9 disobedience 166 dreams 135 East Timor 112–20 Eco, Umberto 99–101 Semiotics and the Philosophy of Language 99 signs and 102–3 Egypt 157–63 enactments 79 Erdem, Tulin 24–5 events 94 faces 60–2, 149, 183–5, 192 Fanon, Frantz 135–6 FARC (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia) 22 foreign aid 19–20 France 189–91 Fretilin (Revolutionary Front for an Independent East Timor) 114 Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (FARC) 22 Galeano, Eduardo 56 García, F. D. 69
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Gay Liberation Front 192–4 Gay Liberation Movement of Chile (MOVILH) 173–7 Gays, Che of the 171–2, 177 interview with 172–82 Gell, Alfred 149, 154 Art and Agency 111, 119 general semiotics 100–1 genericide 24–5 Gezmis, Deniz 169 gifts 116 Glass and a Bottle (Picasso) 140–1 Godfrey, Joseph 43–5 Gogard Jean-Luc 28–9 Granma 9 Guattari, Felix 51, 172 “Guerilleros, Les” (Lartéguy) 185–6 Guerrillero Heroico (1960) (Gutiérrez (Korda)) 1, 8 branding and 12–13, 15–17, 27, 34–5 commercial use of 8–10, 18, 21 copyright and 8, 10–11, 27 global links and 66–7 history of 54–6, 67, 136–7 likeness and 60–2 protests and 149–50, 156, 161, 166 queerness and 171–2, 183–4, 192–4 see also “Che of the Gays, The” replication and 146, 148, 184–91 as a symbol 121–2 Guevara, Ernesto “Che” 2–3, 25, 121, 128, 144 see also Guerrillero Heroico death of 2, 34, 188–9, 194–5 Egypt and 157–60 New Man theory and 136 Palestine and 156–7 use of portraits of 8–10 Gusmão, Xanana 114–15, 110–12, 171 Gutiérrez, Alberto Díaz (Korda) 8, 68 Guerrillero Heroico (1960) see Guerrillero Heroico Heidegger, Martin 42 Hodges, Andrew 194 Homo Viator (Marcel) 43–5, 47 homosexuality 172–82 hope 42–4, 53, 51, 63 desire and 42–5 Human Condition, The (Arendt) 83
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Index icons 104, 135 images 1, 42, 85–8, 134 see also likeness; viral images commercial use of 8–10, 20–1 meanings and 79–80 replication and 146 theory and 51–4 viewers and 133–4, 136, 139 imaging 85–6, 87–8 India 37–8 Indigenous Research Methodologies (IRMs) 5, 122–4, 134 ingredient branding 25–6 INK 192 Internet, the 147 check caps interpreting 37 Invisible Children 147 IRMs (Indigenous Research Methodologies) 5, 122–4, 134 Jakobson, Roman 96–7, 102–3, 102 Kenya 53 Kley 77 knowing 137–9, 160–1 knowledge 89 Kony 2012 campaign 147 Korda, Alberto 8, 68 Guerrillero Heroico (1960) see Guerrillero Heroico Kristeva, Julia 129 Kunzle, David: Che Guevara: Icon, Myth and Message 68 Larson, Jeff A. 10, 16–17 images and 21 Lartéguy, Jean: “Guerilleros, Les” 185–6 Latuff, Carlos 30–1 Levinas, Emmanuel 60–1 likeness 58–62 liminality 105 Lizardo, Omar 10, 16–17 images and 21 logo 11 logotype 11 love 139, 142–3 McDonald, Allan 30, 31 Marcel, Gabriel: Homo Viator 43–5, 47
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Marker, Chris: “Cuba Si!” (1961) 188 Más, Aleida 18 Massari, Robert 24 metaphorical relations 104 Methodology of the Oppressed, The (Sandoval) 122, 131–2, 139, 142–3 Mexico 21–2 mimesis 164 Minh-Ha, Trinh T. 5 modest witness 146 Moore, Robert E. 11–12 Morales, Evo 20 MOVILH (Gay Liberation Movement of Chile) 173–7 murals 73–8, 80 Nakba commemorations 149–50 narrative 140 need 47 New York Times 8–10 Ojeda Ríos, Filiberto 169 On the Shores of Politics (Rancière) 109 ontological-phenomenology 39–42 Opus 186–8 ostensification 97 Osty, Jean Pierre Lucien 185–6 Palestine 40–2, 156–7 Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) 157 parallelism 108, 111, 117 Paris Match 185–91 Paris protests 156 Peirce, C. S. 96, 106 Petrilli, Susan: Semiotics Unbounded 98, 100 phainomenon 42 phenomenology 4, 38–9 photographs 59 see also likeness Picasso, Pablo: Glass and a Bottle 140–1 PLO (Palestine Liberation Organization) 157 Ponzio, Augusto: Semiotics Unbounded 98, 100 Porras, Fernando 20 post-structuralism 92–5 posters 9, 18, 68–9 praxis 83
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224 Index Preziosi, Donald 97–8, 103–4 production 96 protests 149–50, 156, 161, 166 Puerto Rico, Che of 169 punctum 39, 42, 51, 57–8 t–shirts and 47, 49–50 queerness 171–2, 182 Radio Caracas Television (RCTV) 69–70 Ramallah 40–2 Rancière, Jacques 109 On the Shores of Politics 109 RCTV (Radio Caracas Television) 69–70 rebellion 38, students and 189–91 t-shirts and 47, 49 reception 96 Red Cross 79 reductionism 89 representation 90–1, 115–16, 153 Research is Ceremony (Wilson, Shawn) 134 Revolutionary Front for an Independent East Timor (Fretilin) 114 Robles, Victor Hugo 171–2 interview with 172–82 Ruiz, Vicente 178 Saeed, Khaled Mohamed 156 Sánchez, M. 69–70 Sandoval, Chela: Methodology of the Oppressed, The 122, 131–2, 139, 142–3 Sankara, Thomas 169 Schwitters, Kurt 140 seeing 81 semionauts 30, 139 semiotics 5, 95, 92–6, 183 see also artifice; signs chora and 129–30 Eco, Umberto and 99–101 Gell, Alfred and 111 ostensification and 97–8 post-structuralism and 92–5 reception and 95–6 Semiotics and the Philosophy of Language (Eco) 99 Semiotics Unbounded (Petrilli and Ponzio) 98, 99
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Shields, R. 108–9 Sidnell, M. J. 104, 105–6 signs 94, 96, 99–104 see also artifice; semiotics Silver, David 10 Simon, Roger 167 singularization 26 Smirnoff UK 8 Sola, O. 69 soundscape 122, 144 specific semiotics 100 spin-offs 116 structuralism 93–5 “Structure, Sign, and Play” (Derrida) 93–5 student uprisings 189–91 studium 39, 42, 51, 57 t-shirts and 49 Swait, Joffre 24–5 t-shirts 46–50 territory 51–4 testimony 167–8 The Globalism Institute 117 The Globalism Institute RMIT Report 117–18 Torricelli Act 18 trademark 11 Turkish Che, the 169 Twitchell, James Brand Nation 33–4 U.S. 3 Venezuela 71, 69–77 see also C.A.G.V.C. viewers 133–4, 136, 139 viral images 146–8, 156 viral marketing 24, 147 viral videos 147 virtual 58, 98–9, 108–11, 118–20, 154 visual, the 58 visualizations 149 Williamson, Sophie J. 156 Wilson, Shawn: Research is Ceremony 134 witnessing 149, 165–8 Woods, Tiger 14 Yemen 150 Zapatistas 22–3
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